The three-week meeting will draw together experts in ballistics, weapons systems, explosives and other specialized fields such as metals and paints to conduct "an in-depth study of the available evidence," prosecutors said in a statement.
The meeting "must lead to a significant step forward in the criminal investigation and towards legal and convincing evidence in particular," according to the statement.
The Dutch Safety Board last month concluded that the Boeing 777 was brought down on July 17, 2014, by a Soviet- designed Buk missile, causing the plane to break up in midair and killing all 298 people on board.
The safety board report didn't apportion blame - that is up to the five-nation joint investigation team working to bring to justice those responsible. The team includes experts from the Netherlands, Australia, Malaysia, Belgium and Ukraine.
Among evidence they will study is a selection of soil samples gathered earlier this year from possible Buk launch sites and an in-depth examination into possible parts of a Buk missile, Dutch prosecutors said.