Kyle Tretina, PhD

Kyle Tretina, PhD

Somerville, Massachusetts, United States
4K followers 500+ connections

About

I am a PhD-trained computational immunologist/microbiologist and a passionate advocate…

Activity

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Experience

  • NVIDIA Graphic

    NVIDIA

    Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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    Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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    Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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    Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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    Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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    Hartford, Connecticut Area

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    University of Maryland, Baltimore

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    Chicago, Illinois, United States

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    Wheaton, IL

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    Camden, NJ

Education

  • University of Maryland Baltimore

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    Activities and Societies: Boosted department community life by writing a newsletter, presenting tours of the city, running and presenting at journal clubs, organizing research forums and symposia, coordinating a podcast, chairing student committees, bolstering local outreach programs, representing the program at university meetings, and providing research mentorship for four students for a cumulative four years

    Teaching and Supervisory Experience:

    (2016) Committee member, Qualifying Exam Preparation, Molecular Microbiology and Immunology program
    (2016) Invited Program Representative, University of Maryland Master Plan Meeting
    (2016) Coordinator, Annual Graduate Research Symposium
    (2016) Mentor to Saqlain Amin, Senior at Towson University
    (2015-2017) Mentor to Jamal Badaoui, 2nd year student at Baltimore City Community College
    (2015-2017) Interviewer/Editor, Beyond the…

    Teaching and Supervisory Experience:

    (2016) Committee member, Qualifying Exam Preparation, Molecular Microbiology and Immunology program
    (2016) Invited Program Representative, University of Maryland Master Plan Meeting
    (2016) Coordinator, Annual Graduate Research Symposium
    (2016) Mentor to Saqlain Amin, Senior at Towson University
    (2015-2017) Mentor to Jamal Badaoui, 2nd year student at Baltimore City Community College
    (2015-2017) Interviewer/Editor, Beyond the Abstract student-led podcast
    (2015) Chair, Parasitology Student-Selected Speaker Committee
    (2014-2016) Organizer, summer student research forum with the Office of Student Research
    (2013) Mentor to Bilal Iqbal, Senior at University of Maryland Baltimore County

    Additional Training:

    (2013) Programming Workshop, Institute of Genome Sciences, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore
    (2013) UMB GPILS Summer Bridge Course, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore

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    Activities and Societies: Engaged the college scientific and larger community though participation in societies, internships, teacher's assistantships, tutoring, sports, and extracurricular jobs.

    Teaching and Supervisory Experience:
    (2010) Teacher’s Assistant Microbiology & Immunology
    (2009-2011) Undergraduate Tutoring and Mentoring for General Chemistry, College Biology I
    (2008-2009) Tour Coordinator & Fund Raiser for the Wheaton College Gospel Choir

    Additional Activities:

    (2007-2008) Wheaton College Hockey Scorekeeper, Disc Jockey, and Equipment Manager
    (2007) intramural men's soccer champion
    (2006-2011) Electricians Assistant at Tretina Electric

Licenses & Certifications

Publications

  • Re-annotation of the Theileria parva genome refines 53% of the proteome and uncovers essential components of N-glycosylation, a conserved pathway in many organisms

    BMC Genomics

    Background
    The apicomplexan parasite Theileria parva causes a livestock disease called East coast fever (ECF), with millions of animals at risk in sub-Saharan East and Southern Africa, the geographic distribution of T. parva. Over a million bovines die each year of ECF, with a tremendous economic burden to pastoralists in endemic countries. Comprehensive, accurate parasite genome annotation can facilitate the discovery of novel chemotherapeutic targets for disease treatment, as well as…

    Background
    The apicomplexan parasite Theileria parva causes a livestock disease called East coast fever (ECF), with millions of animals at risk in sub-Saharan East and Southern Africa, the geographic distribution of T. parva. Over a million bovines die each year of ECF, with a tremendous economic burden to pastoralists in endemic countries. Comprehensive, accurate parasite genome annotation can facilitate the discovery of novel chemotherapeutic targets for disease treatment, as well as elucidate the biology of the parasite. However, genome annotation remains a significant challenge because of limitations in the quality and quantity of the data being used to inform the location and function of protein-coding genes and, when RNA data are used, the underlying biological complexity of the processes involved in gene expression. Here, we apply our recently published RNAseq dataset derived from the schizont life-cycle stage of T. parva to update structural and functional gene annotations across the entire nuclear genome.

    Results
    The re-annotation effort lead to evidence-supported updates in over half of all protein-coding sequence (CDS) predictions, including exon changes, gene merges and gene splitting, an increase in average CDS length of approximately 50 base pairs, and the identification of 128 new genes. Among the new genes identified were those involved in N-glycosylation, a process previously thought not to exist in this organism and a potentially new chemotherapeutic target pathway for treating ECF. Alternatively-spliced genes were identified, and antisense and multi-gene family transcription were extensively characterized.

    Conclusions
    The process of re-annotation led to novel insights into the organization and expression profiles of protein-coding sequences in this parasite, and uncovered a minimal N-glycosylation pathway that changes our current understanding of the evolution of this post-translational modification in apicomplexan parasites.

    See publication
  • Theileria parasites subvert E2F signaling to stimulate leukocyte proliferation

    Scientific Reports

    Intracellular pathogens have evolved intricate mechanisms to subvert host cell signaling pathways and ensure their own propagation. A lineage of the protozoan parasite genus Theileria infects bovine leukocytes and induces their uncontrolled proliferation causing a leukemia-like disease. Given the importance of E2F transcription factors in mammalian cell cycle regulation, we investigated the role of E2F signaling in Theileria-induced host cell proliferation. Using comparative genomics and…

    Intracellular pathogens have evolved intricate mechanisms to subvert host cell signaling pathways and ensure their own propagation. A lineage of the protozoan parasite genus Theileria infects bovine leukocytes and induces their uncontrolled proliferation causing a leukemia-like disease. Given the importance of E2F transcription factors in mammalian cell cycle regulation, we investigated the role of E2F signaling in Theileria-induced host cell proliferation. Using comparative genomics and surface plasmon resonance, we identified parasite-derived peptides that have the sequence-specific ability to increase E2F signaling by binding E2F negative regulator Retinoblastoma-1 (RB). Using these peptides as a tool to probe host E2F signaling, we show that the disruption of RB complexes ex vivo leads to activation of E2F-driven transcription and increased leukocyte proliferation in an infection-dependent manner. This result is consistent with existing models and, together, they support a critical role of E2F signaling for Theileria-induced host cell proliferation, and its potential direct manipulation by one or more parasite proteins.

    Other authors
    See publication
  • Interferon-induced guanylate-binding proteins: Guardians of host defense in health and disease

    Journal of Experimental Medicine

    Guanylate-binding proteins (GBPs) have recently emerged as central orchestrators of immunity to infection, inflammation, and neoplastic diseases. Within numerous host cell types, these IFN-induced GTPases assemble into large nanomachines that execute distinct host defense activities against a wide variety of microbial pathogens. In addition, GBPs customize inflammasome responses to bacterial infection and sepsis, where they act as critical rheostats to amplify innate immunity and regulate…

    Guanylate-binding proteins (GBPs) have recently emerged as central orchestrators of immunity to infection, inflammation, and neoplastic diseases. Within numerous host cell types, these IFN-induced GTPases assemble into large nanomachines that execute distinct host defense activities against a wide variety of microbial pathogens. In addition, GBPs customize inflammasome responses to bacterial infection and sepsis, where they act as critical rheostats to amplify innate immunity and regulate tissue damage. Similar functions are becoming evident for metabolic inflammatory syndromes and cancer, further underscoring the importance of GBPs within infectious as well as altered homeostatic settings. A better understanding of the basic biology of these IFN-induced GTPases could thus benefit clinical approaches to a wide spectrum of important human diseases.

    Other authors
    See publication
  • Discovery of a novel species, Theileria haneyi n. sp., infective to equids, highlights exceptional genomic diversity within the genus Theileria: implications for apicomplexan parasite surveillance

    International Journal for Parasitology

    A novel apicomplexan parasite was serendipitously discovered in horses at the United States - Mexico border. Phylogenetic analysis based on 18S rDNA showed the erythrocyte-infective parasite to be related to, but distinct from, Theileria spp. in Africa, the most similar taxa being Theileria spp. from waterbuck and mountain zebra. The degree of sequence variability observed at the 18S rDNA locus also suggests the likely existence of additional cryptic species. Among described species, the genome…

    A novel apicomplexan parasite was serendipitously discovered in horses at the United States - Mexico border. Phylogenetic analysis based on 18S rDNA showed the erythrocyte-infective parasite to be related to, but distinct from, Theileria spp. in Africa, the most similar taxa being Theileria spp. from waterbuck and mountain zebra. The degree of sequence variability observed at the 18S rDNA locus also suggests the likely existence of additional cryptic species. Among described species, the genome of this novel equid Theileria parasite is most similar to that of Theileria equi, also a pathogen of horses. The estimated divergence time between the new Theileria sp. and T. equi, based on genomic sequence data, is greater than 33 million years. Average protein sequence divergence between them, at 23%, is greater than that of Theileria parva and Theileria annulata proteins, which is 18%. The latter two represent highly virulent Theileria spp. of domestic cattle, as well as of African and Asian wild buffalo, respectively, which differ markedly in pathology, host cell tropism, tick vector and geographical distribution. The extent of genome-wide sequence divergence, as well as significant morphological differences, relative to T. equi justify the classification of Theileria sp. as a new taxon. Despite the overall genomic divergence, the nine member equi merozoite antigen (EMA) superfamily, previously found as a multigene family only in T. equi, is also present in the novel parasite. Practically, significant sequence divergence in antigenic loci resulted in this undescribed Theileria sp. not being detectable using currently available diagnostic tests. Discovery of this novel species infective to equids highlights exceptional diversity within the genus Theileria, a finding with serious implications for apicomplexan parasite surveillance.

    See publication
  • Genome-wide diversity and gene expression profiling of Babesia microti isolates identify polymorphic genes that mediate host-pathogen interactions

    Scientific Reports

    Babesia microti, a tick-transmitted, intraerythrocytic protozoan parasite circulating mainly among small mammals, is the primary cause of human babesiosis. While most cases are transmitted by Ixodes ticks, the disease may also be transmitted through blood transfusion and perinatally. A comprehensive analysis of genome composition, genetic diversity, and gene expression profiling of seven B. microti isolates revealed that genetic variation in isolates from the Northeast United States is almost…

    Babesia microti, a tick-transmitted, intraerythrocytic protozoan parasite circulating mainly among small mammals, is the primary cause of human babesiosis. While most cases are transmitted by Ixodes ticks, the disease may also be transmitted through blood transfusion and perinatally. A comprehensive analysis of genome composition, genetic diversity, and gene expression profiling of seven B. microti isolates revealed that genetic variation in isolates from the Northeast United States is almost exclusively associated with genes encoding the surface proteome and secretome of the parasite. Furthermore, we found that polymorphism is restricted to a small number of genes, which are highly expressed during infection. In order to identify pathogen-encoded factors involved in host-parasite interactions, we screened a proteome array comprised of 174 B. microti proteins, including several predicted members of the parasite secretome. Using this immuno-proteomic approach we identified several novel antigens that trigger strong host immune responses during the onset of infection. The genomic and immunological data presented herein provide the first insights into the determinants of B. microti interaction with its mammalian hosts and their relevance for understanding the selective pressures acting on parasite evolution.

    See publication
  • Cis regulatory motifs and antisense transcriptional control in the apicomplexan Theileria parva

    BMC Genomics

    BACKGROUND: Theileria parva is an intracellular parasite that causes a lymphoproliferative disease in cattle. It does so by inducing cancer-like phenotypes in the host cells it infects, although the molecular and regulatory mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. RNAseq data, and the resulting updated genome annotation now available for this parasite, offer an unprecedented opportunity to characterize the genomic features associated with gene regulation in this species. Our previous…

    BACKGROUND: Theileria parva is an intracellular parasite that causes a lymphoproliferative disease in cattle. It does so by inducing cancer-like phenotypes in the host cells it infects, although the molecular and regulatory mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. RNAseq data, and the resulting updated genome annotation now available for this parasite, offer an unprecedented opportunity to characterize the genomic features associated with gene regulation in this species. Our previous analyses revealed a T. parva genome even more gene-dense than previously thought, with many adjacent loci overlapping each other, not only at the level of untranslated sequences (UTRs) but even in coding sequences.
    RESULTS: Despite this compactness, Theileria intergenic regions show a pattern of size distribution indicative of monocistronic gene transcription. Three previously described motifs are conserved among Theileria species and highly prevalent in promoter regions near or at the transcription start sites. We found novel motifs at many transcription termination sites, as well as upstream of parasite genes thought to be critical for host transformation. Adjacent genes that could be regulated by antisense transcription from an overlapping transcriptional unit are syntenic between T. parva and P. falciparum at a frequency higher than expected by chance, suggesting the presence of common, and evolutionary old, regulatory mechanisms in the phylum Apicomplexa.
    CONCLUSIONS: We propose a model of transcription with conserved sense and antisense transcription from a few taxonomically ubiquitous and several species-specific promoter motifs. Interestingly, the gene networks regulated by conserved promoters are themselves, in most cases, not conserved between species or genera.

    Other authors
    • Roger Pelle
    •  Joana C. Silva
    See publication
  • Protozoan Parasite Genomics

    Springer-Verlag Wein

    In the past years, genome projects for numerous human parasites have been completed and now allow first in depth comparisons and evolutionary conclusions. The genomes of parasites reflect the coevolution with their host, metabolic capacities depending on their respective habitat in the host. Gut parasites usually have an anaerobic metabolism, while blood parasites have an aerobic metabolism, intracellular parasites escape the immune system, while extracellular parasites evade the immune system,…

    In the past years, genome projects for numerous human parasites have been completed and now allow first in depth comparisons and evolutionary conclusions. The genomes of parasites reflect the coevolution with their host, metabolic capacities depending on their respective habitat in the host. Gut parasites usually have an anaerobic metabolism, while blood parasites have an aerobic metabolism, intracellular parasites escape the immune system, while extracellular parasites evade the immune system, usually by antigenic variation. Comprehensive genome data now being available allow us to address profound scientific questions, such as which traits enable the parasite to survive in the human host, which to cause disease and which can be used as drug targets. This book intends to give an overview of the state of knowledge on “the molecules” of protozoan parasites – on their genomes, proteomes, glycomes and lipidomes.

    Other authors
    • Omar S. Harb
    • Ulrike Boehme
    • Kathryn Crouch
    • Olukemi O. Ifeonu
    • David S. Roos
    • Joana C Silva
    • Fatima Silva-Franco
    • Staffan Svärd
    • Gareth Weedall
    See publication
  • The genomes of three stocks comprising the most widely utilized live sporozoite Theileria parva vaccine exhibit very different degrees and patterns of sequence divergence

    BMC Genomics

    BACKGROUND: There are no commercially available vaccines against human protozoan parasitic diseases, despite the success of vaccination-induced long-term protection against infectious diseases. East Coast fever, caused by the protist Theileria parva, kills one million cattle each year in sub-Saharan Africa, and contributes significantly to hunger and poverty in the region. A highly effective, live, multi-isolate vaccine against T. parva exists, but its component isolates have not been…

    BACKGROUND: There are no commercially available vaccines against human protozoan parasitic diseases, despite the success of vaccination-induced long-term protection against infectious diseases. East Coast fever, caused by the protist Theileria parva, kills one million cattle each year in sub-Saharan Africa, and contributes significantly to hunger and poverty in the region. A highly effective, live, multi-isolate vaccine against T. parva exists, but its component isolates have not been characterized. Here we sequence and compare the three component T. parva stocks within this vaccine, the Muguga Cocktail, namely Muguga, Kiambu5 and Serengeti-transformed, aiming to identify genomic features that contribute to vaccine efficacy.
    RESULTS: We find that Serengeti-transformed, originally isolated from the wildlife carrier, the African Cape buffalo, is remarkably and unexpectedly similar to the Muguga isolate. The 420 detectable non-synonymous SNPs were distributed among only 53 genes, primarily subtelomeric antigens and antigenic families. The Kiambu5 isolate is considerably more divergent, with close to 40,000 SNPs relative to Muguga, including >8,500 non-synonymous mutations distributed among >1,700 (42.5 %) of the predicted genes. These genetic markers of the component stocks can be used to characterize the composition of new batches of the Muguga Cocktail.
    CONCLUSIONS: Differences among these three isolates, while extensive, represent only a small proportion of the genetic variation in the entire species. Given the efficacy of the Muguga Cocktail in inducing long-lasting protection against infections in the field, our results suggest that whole-organism vaccines against parasitic diseases can be highly efficacious despite considerable genome-wide differences relative to the isolates against which they protect.

    Other authors
    • Martin Norling
    • Richard P. Bishop
    • Roger Pelle
    • Weihong Qi
    • Sonal Henson
    • Elliott F. Drabek
    • David Odongo
    • Stephen Mwaura
    • Thomas Njoroge
    • Joana C. Silva
    See publication
  • Theileria-transformed bovine leukocytes have cancer hallmarks

    Trends in Parasitology

    The genus Theileria includes tick-transmitted apicomplexan parasites of ruminants with substantial economic impact in endemic countries. Some species, including Theileria parva and Theileria annulata, infect leukocytes where they induce phenotypes that are shared with some cancers, most notably immortalization, hyperproliferation, and dissemination. Despite considerable research into the affected host signaling pathways, the parasite proteins directly responsible for these host phenotypes…

    The genus Theileria includes tick-transmitted apicomplexan parasites of ruminants with substantial economic impact in endemic countries. Some species, including Theileria parva and Theileria annulata, infect leukocytes where they induce phenotypes that are shared with some cancers, most notably immortalization, hyperproliferation, and dissemination. Despite considerable research into the affected host signaling pathways, the parasite proteins directly responsible for these host phenotypes remain unknown. In this review we outline current knowledge on the manipulation of host cells by transformation-inducing Theileria, and we propose that comparisons between cancer biology and host-Theileria interactions can reveal chemotherapeutic targets against Theileria-induced pathogenesis based on cancer treatment approaches.

    Other authors
    • Tim Gotia
    • David J. Mann
    • Joana C. Silva
    See publication

Honors & Awards

  • Otani Memorial Award Nominee

    Molecular Microbiology and Immunology Program

    given to “a graduate student ... of outstanding character who demonstrates superior academic performance and who shows outstanding promise as an independent investigator”.

  • J. Howard Brown Award

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    Award created for “an outstanding graduate student who is making a contribution worthy of recognition in the field of microbiology”.

  • Ph.D. Scholar Award Nominee

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    Award created to recognize “an outstanding academic performance record and show great potential as a scientist”.

  • University of Maryland, Immunity and Infection T32 training grant

    NIH/NIAID

    AI007540-14; http://grantome.com/grant/NIH/T32-AI007540-16

  • National SMART Grant Recipient

    U.S. Department of Education

Organizations

  • American Society of Microbiology

    Member

    - Present
  • The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

    Member

    - Present
  • American Scientific Affiliation Student Chapter

    Representative, Founder

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  • Sigma Delta Pi Pre-Health Professions Club

    Member

    -

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