Thank you, Hayleigh, and welcome, everyone, to our First Quarter 2024 Financial Results and Quarter Update Conference Call. Today, I will begin with a brief update on our recent activities. Then Dr. Suku Nagendran, President and Head of R&D of Taysha, will provide an update on our lead TSHA-102 program in clinical evaluation for the treatment of Rett syndrome. Kamran Alam, our Chief Financial Officer, will follow up with a financial update. I will provide closing remarks and open the call up for questions. We are pleased with the recent progress that we've made to advance TSHA-102, our lead gene therapy program in clinical evaluation for the treatment of Rett syndrome. This includes reporting encouraging longer-term data for the first 2 adult patients dosed in the low-dose cohort and ENrolling the first patient in the high-dose cohort of our REVEAL Phase I/II adolescent and adult trial earlier than planned; dosing the second patient in our REVEAL Phase I/II pediatric trial; and receiving regenerative medicine advanced therapy designation from the FDA for TSHA-102. We believe this progress reinforces the therapeutic potential of TSHA-102 across a broad population of patients with Rett syndrome and supports the continued clinical evaluation of our gene therapy program. We believe that we are well positioned for continued execution across our key upcoming value-creating milestones for our TSHA-102 program, with the goal of generating critical longer-term clinical data across a broad range of ages and stages of patients with Rett syndrome in multiple geographies that will guide the next phase of our studies. The unmet need and burden of care for Rett syndrome is high. As a rare neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations of the MECP2 gene, Rett syndrome affects an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 patients in the United States, European Union and the United Kingdom. Currently, there are no approved disease-modifying therapies that treat the genetic root cause of the disease, and there is a significant unmet medical need. The random inactivation and subsequent mosaic pattern of MECP2 expression results in a mixture of cells that are either deficient in MECP2 protein or express MECP2 protein normally, which makes Rett syndrome challenging to treat with traditional small molecule and gene therapy approaches. We believe our TSHA-102 gene therapy candidate, equipped with the novel miRNA responsive autoregulatory element, or miRARE technology, has the potential to appropriately address this challenge by mediating MECP2 expression in the central nervous system on a cell-by-cell basis to overcome the risks associated with both under- and over-expression of MECP2 protein. We are evaluating TSHA-102 in 2 ongoing Phase I/II REVEAL trials, an adolescent and adult trial taking place in Canada and the U.S. and a pediatric trial taking place in the U.S. with clearance in the U.K. As a reminder, our REVEAL Phase I/II adolescent and adult trial is the first in human study assessing the safety and preliminary efficacy of TSHA-102 in females aged 12 years and older with Rett syndrome. We are currently enrolling patients in Part A, the dose escalation portion of the trial, which is evaluating 2 dose levels of TSHA-102 sequentially. Two patients have been dosed to date in cohort 1 with the low dose of TSHA-102 of 5.7x10^14 total vector genomes, and dosing in cohort 1 is now considered complete. Following review of the clinical data from the first 3 patients treated with TSHA-102 across the adolescent and adult trial and the pediatric trial, the Independent Data Monitoring Committee, or IDMC, approved our request to proceed to an early dose escalation in the adolescent and adult trial. Data from Part A of the trial will be assessed by regulatory agencies and the IDMC to provide guidance to determine final key elements of the Part B aspect of our trial, The dose expansion portion, including hierarchy of efficacy endpoints, study duration and the maximum tolerated dose or maximum administered dose. Therefore, advancing to cohort 2 evaluating the high dose of TSHA-102 of 1x10^15 total vector genomes earlier than planned accelerates our ability to inform our clinical development and regulatory strategy for Part B. We're pleased to share the first patient in a high dose cohort has been enrolled in the study, and dosing is scheduled to take place here in the second quarter of 2024. Earlier this year, we announced encouraging longer-term data for the first 2 adult patients treated in the low-dose cohort with late motor deterioration Stage IV Rett syndrome and different genetic mutations and severity of disease. Recall, when we initiated REVEAL, our focus was primarily on safety, with little expectation of efficacy for the adult population among key opinion leaders in the Rett syndrome community due to the advanced stage of the disease. Therefore, it was very exciting last November to announce the encouraging initial impact [ that ] TSHA-102 appeared to have across multiple clinical domains in the first 2 adult patients as early as 4 weeks following treatment, despite the trial participants having very different genetic mutations and disease severity. We presented longer-term follow-up data in the first quarter of this year, including a 6-month follow-up assessment for the first adult patient showing a continued durable response with sustained and new improvements in the absence or reduction of steroid levels. As of the 6-month assessment, patient 1 showed sustained improved key efficacy measures at decreased steroid levels with new improvements observed in the Rett Syndrome Behavioral Questionnaire, or RSBQ. Additionally, the second adult patients demonstrated sustained improvements across key efficacy measures with new improvements observed in certain measures, including the Revised Motor Behavior Assessment, or R-MBA, as of the 12-week assessment and significantly reduced seizures as of the 19-week assessment following treatment. Moreover, the longer-term clinical observations reported by the principal investigator showed that both patients had sustained and new improvements across multiple clinical domains impacting activities of daily living, including motor skills, socialization and communication, autonomic function and seizures compared to earlier post-treatment assessments. Importantly, these continued improvements were reported at week 35, following completion of the steroid taper for the first patient and at week 19 at decreased steroid levels for the second patient. Suku will discuss these observations in more detail. The longer-term safety profile is also encouraging. Data from the first 2 adult patients showed that TSHA-102 was well tolerated, with no treatment-emergent serious adverse events as of the week 35 assessment for Patient 1 and as of the 19-week assessment for Patient 2. We believe the safety profile and continued improvement across multiple clinical domains, even at reduced steroid levels in both adult patients -- in both adult patients with advanced Stage IV Rett syndrome treated with those of TSHA-102, supports the durability and transformational potential of TSHA-102 across multiple genotypes of Rett syndrome and further validates our construct. We are also focused on evaluating the therapeutic potential of TSHA-102 in the pediatric population, where we hope to see a similar safety profile and a consistent pattern of response across clinical domains in the pediatric patients with different genotypes treated with the low dose of TSHA-102. Our ongoing REVEAL Phase I/II pediatric trial is evaluating the safety and preliminary efficacy of TSHA-102 in female patients with Rett syndrome aged 5 to 8 years old. We are currently enrolling pediatric patients in Part A of the trial, which will evaluate 2 dose levels of TSHA-102 sequentially. We have dosed the second pediatric patient in cohort 1, the low-dose cohort of 5.7x10^14 vector genomes, following the IDMC's review of the initial 6-week data from the first pediatric patient dose. While this trial captures a younger patient population with an earlier stage of disease compared to our adolescent and adult trial, it is important to understand that most patients with Stage III Rett syndrome have already developed the hallmark symptoms of the disease, and therefore present with many advanced disease manifestations. Patients typically approach Stage III of the disease, known as the pseudostationary symptom stage, after a period of deterioration and rapid regression of learned skills, particularly relating to language and hand movement. The regression period is also characterized by partial or complete loss of acquired purposeful hand skills and spoken language, gait abnormalities and stereotypic hand movements, which results in the loss of independence and in most cases leads to lifelong caregiver dependence. Many patients in this age group also suffer from seizures that can significantly impact their quality of life. Similar to the adult population, the heterogeneity among pediatric patients is high due to the broad spectrum of genetic backgrounds that result in variable phenotypic symptoms and severity in Rett syndrome. Part A of the pediatric trial is intended to include patients across a broad spectrum of genetic backgrounds, which will help us generate a robust data set to inform our development plan for the next phase of the study. We hope to see a consistent pattern of response across key clinical domains in the pediatric patients with different genotypes treated in the low-dose cohort, which we believe will bring us closer to our goal of bringing a potentially transformative treatment to all patients with Rett syndrome. Recently, we were pleased to receive Regenerative Medicines Advanced Therapy, or RMAT, designation from the FDA following review of available safety and efficacy data from the first 2 adult patients and the first pediatric patient dosed with the low dose of TSHA-102. A regenerative medicine therapy is eligible for RMAT designation if it is intended to treat, modify, reverse or cure a serious condition and preliminary clinical evidence indicates the therapy has the potential to address unmet needs for such a condition. Sponsored companies receiving RMAT designation can benefit from increased interactions with FDA involving senior managers to help expedite drug development. We believe receiving RMAT designation is important recognition from the FDA that reinforces the high unmet need in Rett syndrome and the therapeutic potential of TSHA-102 to bring meaningful change to patients and families with Rett syndrome. We will work closely with the FDA and other regulatory agencies as we continue to advance our TSHA-102 program. We look forward to the year ahead as we remain focused on further expanding into pediatric patients, executing trials in multiple geographies, evaluating the high dose across age groups and generating critical longer-term clinical data across a broad population of patients with Rett syndrome that will guide the next phase of our studies. We expect to provide an update on clinical data from the completed low-dose cohort of our REVEAL adolescent and adult trial and initial available data from the low-dose cohort of our REVEAL pediatric trial in mid-2024. Additionally, we expect to report initial available data from the high-dose cohort for both of our REVEAL trials in the second half of 2024. I will now turn the call over to Suku to provide a more in-depth discussion of TSHA-102. Suku?