April 2016 Brad Dieter, PhD

CURRICULUM VITAE

Personal Details

Name Brad P. Dieter

Current positions Providence Foundation Research Fellow

Providence Sacred Heart Medical Research Center, Spokane, WA

Clinical Faculty

Washington State University, College of Medicine, Spokane, WA

Home address 2708 S. Conklin Dr.

Spokane Valley, WA 99037

Phone (509) 435-3440

Email

Education and Training

Ph.D.

University of Idaho, Moscow, ID

Movement Sciences, Exercise Physiology

August 2012-December 2014

M.S.

University of Idaho, Moscow, ID

Movement Sciences, Exercise Physiology

August 2011-August 2012

B.A.

Washington State University, Pullman, WA

January 2007-December 2009

Certifications

Graduate Academic Certificate in Statistical Science, Department of Statistics, University of Idaho, (May 2014)

Professional Experience

Research Experience

Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Providence Medical Research Center, Spokane, Washington

Project: Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Diabetic Kidney Disease 2013-2014

Providence Medical Research Center, Providence Sacred Heart Supervisor: Dr Katherine R Tuttle

Research Assistant, Washington State University, Spokane, Washington

Project: The Effect of Exercise on Nrf2 Signalling in Diabetes 2013-2014

College of Pharmacy, Washington State University Supervisor: Dr Susan A Marsh and Dr Chantal A Vella

Project: Western Diet and Fetal Genes in Mouse Hearts 2013-2014 College of Pharmacy, Washington State University Supervisor: Dr Susan A Marsh

Research Assistant, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho

Project: Mechanisms of Cardioprotection in Grizzly Bears 2012-2014

Bear Center, Washington State University Supervisor: Dr Chantal A Vella

Project: Muscle Activation Patterns and Patellofemoral Pain in Cycling 2011-2012 Movement Sciences, University of Idaho Supervisor: Kathy D. Browder

Professional training experiences

O’Brien Center Advanced Microscopy Workshop 2015

National Institute of Health CRIC Study Research Workshop 2015

Awards and Scholarships

Awards

Inaugural Providence Foundation Research Fellow, Providence Foundation

Graduate Assistantship, Department of Movement Sciences, University of Idaho (2011-2014)

Outstanding Masters Research Award, Northwest American College of Sports Medicine Conference (2013)

Scholarships

Edith Betts Graduate Student Scholarship, Department of Movement Sciences, University of Idaho

(2013-2104)

Academic Service

Peer Reviewer

Diabetes Care (2014-Present)

Current Drug Metabolism (2015-Present)

Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (2014-Present)

Professional societies

American Society of Nephrology (2014-Present)

American Phyiosology Society (2013-Present)

International Society of Sports Nutrition (2012-Present)

Ancestral Health Society (2013-Present)

American Society of Biomechanics (2011-2013)

National Strength and Conditioning Association (2009-2012)

Committees

Program Committee Member, Ancestral Health Symposium (2014)

Co-chair of symposium at national meeting, “Novel Mechanisms of Transcriptional Regulation

in Cardiac Hypertrophy”, Experimental Biology (2014)

Graduate Student Professional Association Senator (2013) University of Idaho

3rd Year Review Committee, Faculty Review, University of Idaho (2012)

Tenure and Review Committee, Movement Sciences Department, University of Idaho (2012)

Laboratory Skills

Benchtop

Immunohistochemistry, Confocal microscopy, co-immunoprecipitation, genomic DNA isolation, plasmid DNA isolation, immunocytochemistry, PCR, RT-qPCR, Western blotting, cell-culture

In vivo (human)

Surface electromyography, air displacement plethysmography, respiratory gas exchange, VO2 testing

In vivo (mouse)

Intraperitoneal injection, gavage, mechanical ventilation (intubation and nose cone), breeding colony management, rodent treadmill training

In vivo (grizzly bear)

Glucose tolerance tests, insulin tolerance tests, muscle biopsies, adipose tissue biopsies

In vitro

Adherent mammalian cell culture, CRISPR genome editing and knockout cell line development, E. coli plasmid transfection, blue/white color screening for plasmid transfection (E. coli), siRNA gene knockdown

Computer

Advanced statistical modelling, R-statistical computing, SAS statistical computing, signal processing, MATLAB®, SPSS

Publications

1.  Barbosa-Leiker C, McPherson S, Daratha K, Alicic R, Short R, Dieter BP, Roll J, Tuttle, KR. Association between prescription opioid use and biomarkers of kidney disease in US adults. American Journal of Nephrology. (2016) In Review

2.  Dieter BP, Alicic RZ, Meek RL, Anderberg RJ, Cooney SK, Tuttle KR. Novel Therapies for Diabetic Kidney Disease: Storied Past and Forward Paths. Diabetes Spectr. 2015 Aug;28(3):167-74

3.  Anderberg RJ, Dieter BP, Meek RL, Tuttle KR. An Inflammatory Nexus: Serum Amyloid A and inflammation in Diabetic Kidney Disease . Inflammation and Cell Signaling. (2015).

4.  Dahlquist DT, Dieter BP, Koehle MS. Plausible Ergogenic Effects of Vitamin D on Athletic Performance and Recovery. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2015 Aug 19;12:33

5.  Dieter, BP. Dysregulation of Nrf2 signaling in diabetes: An opportunity for a multi-target approach. Journal of Diabetes and Metabolism (2015).

6.  Dieter BP, Johnson EJ, Medford HM, Miller L, Vella CA, Marsh SA. Exercise induced Nrf2 response is blunted in the Db/Db mouse heart and O-GlcNAc regulates Nrf2 activity in the myocardium. The American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology. (2015) In Revision

7.  Johnson EJ, Dieter BP, Marsh SA. Evidence for distinct effects of exercise in different cardiac hypertrophic disorders. Life Sciences. 2015 Feb 15;123:100-6 .

8.  Johnson EJ, Dieter BP, Maricelli J, Medford HM, Rodgers BD, Marsh SA. Exponential modelling of VO2 kinetics in endurance-trained diabetic mice. American Journal of Physiology- Heart and Circulatory Physiology (2015). In Review.

9.  Dieter BP, McGowan CP, Stoll SK, Vella CA. Muscle activation patterns and patellofemoral pain in cyclists. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2014 Apr;46(4):753-61

10.  Dieter BP, Vella CA. A proposed mechanism for exercise attenuated methylglyoxal accumulation: activation of the ARE-Nrf pathway and increased glutathione biosynthesis. Medical Hypotheses. 2013 Nov;81(5):813-5

Manuscripts in Preparation

1.  Dieter BP, Meek RL, Anderberg RJ, Cooney SK, Tuttle KR. Protein kinase c mediates apoptosis and induction of inflammatory signaling in the podocyte. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine (2016). In Preparation

2.  Dieter BP, McPherson S, Afkarian M, Mehrotra R, Tuttle KR. Serum amyloid A and risk of death and end-stage renal disease. American Journal of Kidney Disease. (2016) In Preparation

Conference Presentations

Oral Presentations

1.  Ojogho O, Mejia J, Banihani S, Carson R, Dieter BP. Enhanced Recovery after Kidney Transplantation: 48 Hour Length of Stay in Living and Deceased Donor Transplant. American Transplant Congress. Boston, MA, June 2016.

2.  Dieter BP, Meek RL, Anderberg RJ, Cooney SK, Tuttle KR. Protein kinase c mediates apoptosis and induction of inflammatory signaling in the podocyte. ASN Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, November 2015.

3.  Dieter BP, McPherson S, de Boer I, Short R, Afkarian M, Mehrotra R, Tuttle KR. Serum amyloid A is associated with increased risk of ESRD and death in patients with type 2 diabetes. ASN Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, November 2015.

4.  Dieter BP, Cox EJ, Medford HM, Miller L, Marsh SA. O-GlcNAc plays a role in Nrf2 regulation in the myocardium. Experiment Biology. Boston, MA. March, 2015.

5.  Johnson EJ, Dieter BP, Maricelli J, Rodgers BD, Marsh SA. Exponential modeling of VO2 kinetics in endurance-trained diabetic mice. Regional American College of Sports Medicine. Bend, OR.

6.  Dieter, BP, McGowan CP., Stoll SK., Vella CA. Muscle activation patterns differ between cyclists with patellofemoral pain and those without. Regional American College of Sports Medicine. Salem, OR. March, 2013

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