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Featured researches published by Elke Rogge.


Agronomy for Sustainable Development | 2008

MOTIFS: a monitoring tool for integrated farm sustainability

Marijke Meul; Steven Van Passel; Frank Nevens; Joost Dessein; Elke Rogge; Annelies Mulier; Annelies Van Hauwermeiren

Indicator-based monitoring tools are frequently applied for sustainability assessments, also in agriculture. However, many indicators focus on a rather restricted number of sustainability aspects such as economy or ecology. Moreover the choice of the indicator is rarely explained. The aim of our study was to develop an indicator-based monitoring tool for integrated farm sustainability — i.e. taking into account economic and ecological and social aspects — based on a supported vision of sustainable agriculture and using a set of relevant indicators. Hereby, specific attention was paid to aspects of communication and user-friendliness. Four methodological steps were considered: (i) translating the major principles of a supported vision of sustainable Flemish agriculture into concrete and relevant themes; (ii) designing indicators to monitor progress towards sustainability for each of those themes; (iii) aggregating the indicators into an integrated farm sustainability monitoring tool and (iv) applying the monitoring tool on a practical farm, as a first attempt at end-use validation. Stakeholder participation and expert consulting played an important part in each of these methodological steps. As a case study, the methodology was applied to Flemish dairy farms. As a result, we developed MOTIFS, a user-friendly and strongly communicative indicator-based monitoring tool that allows the measurement of progress towards integrated sustainable dairy farming systems and fits within a well-founded methodological framework. MOTIFS is based on the equality of the economic, ecological and social sustainability dimensions, and this equality is inherently built into the system. Through the applied methodology, we founded the selected themes and indicators and we avoided using indicators that are not relevant to the problem at hand.


Cardiovascular Research | 2008

Gender-specific hypertension and responsiveness to nitric oxide in sGCα1 knockout mice

Emmanuel Buys; Patrick Sips; Pieter Vermeersch; Michael J. Raher; Elke Rogge; Fumito Ichinose; Mieke Dewerchin; Kenneth D. Bloch; Stefan Janssens; Peter Brouckaert

AIM The effects of nitric oxide (NO) in the cardiovascular system are attributed in part to cGMP synthesis by the alpha1beta1 isoform of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). Because available sGC inhibitors are neither enzyme- nor isoform-specific, we generated knockout mice for the alpha1 subunit (sGCalpha1(-/-) mice) in order to investigate the function of sGCalpha1beta1 in the regulation of blood pressure and cardiac function. METHODS AND RESULTS Blood pressure was evaluated, using both non-invasive and invasive haemodynamic techniques, in intact and gonadectomized male and female sGCalpha1(-/-) and wild-type (WT) mice. Cardiac function was assessed with a conductance catheter inserted in the left ventricle of male and female sGCalpha1(-/-) and WT mice. Male sGCalpha1(-/-) mice developed hypertension (147 +/- 2 mmHg), whereas female sGCalpha1(-/-) mice did not (115 +/- 2 mmHg). Orchidectomy and treatment with an androgen receptor antagonist prevented hypertension, while ovariectomy did not influence the phenotype. Chronic testosterone treatment increased blood pressure in ovariectomized sGCalpha1(-/-) mice but not in WT mice. The NO synthase inhibitor Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride raised blood pressure similarly in male and female WT and sGCalpha1(-/-) mice. The ability of NO donor compounds to reduce blood pressure was slightly attenuated in sGCalpha1(-/-) male and female mice as compared to WT mice. The direct sGC stimulator BAY 41-2272 reduced blood pressure only in WT mice. Increased cardiac contractility and arterial elastance as well as impaired ventricular relaxation were observed in both male and female sGCalpha1(-/-) mice. CONCLUSION These findings demonstrate that sGCalpha1beta1-derived cGMP signalling has gender-specific and testosterone-dependent cardiovascular effects and reveal that the effects of NO on systemic blood pressure do not require sGCalpha1beta1.


Cell Death and Disease | 2017

Extracellular ATP drives systemic inflammation, tissue damage and mortality

Anje Cauwels; Elke Rogge; Benjamin Vandendriessche; Sruti Shiva; Peter Brouckaert

Systemic inflammatory response syndromes (SIRS) may be caused by both infectious and sterile insults, such as trauma, ischemia-reperfusion or burns. They are characterized by early excessive inflammatory cytokine production and the endogenous release of several toxic and damaging molecules. These are necessary to fight and resolve the cause of SIRS, but often end up progressively damaging cells and tissues, leading to life-threatening multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS). As inflammasome-dependent cytokines such as interleukin-1β are critically involved in the development of MODS and death in SIRS, and ATP is an essential activator of inflammasomes in vitro, we decided to analyze the ability of ATP removal to prevent excessive tissue damage and mortality in a murine LPS-induced inflammation model. Our results indeed indicate an important pro-inflammatory role for extracellular ATP. However, the effect of ATP is not restricted to inflammasome activation at all. Removing extracellular ATP with systemic apyrase treatment not only prevented IL-1β accumulation but also the production of inflammasome-independent cytokines such as TNF and IL-10. In addition, ATP removal also prevented systemic evidence of cellular disintegration, mitochondrial damage, apoptosis, intestinal barrier disruption and even mortality. Although blocking ATP receptors with the broad-spectrum P2 purinergic receptor antagonist suramin imitated certain beneficial effects of apyrase treatment, it could not prevent morbidity or mortality at all. We conclude that removal of systemic extracellular ATP could be a valuable strategy to dampen systemic inflammatory damage and toxicity in SIRS.


Nature Communications | 2015

Cardiovascular and pharmacological implications of haem-deficient NO-unresponsive soluble guanylate cyclase knock-in mice

Robrecht Thoonen; Anje Cauwels; Kelly Decaluwé; Sandra Geschka; Robert Tainsh; Joris R. Delanghe; Tino Hochepied; Lode De Cauwer; Elke Rogge; Sofie Voet; Patrick Sips; Richard H. Karas; Kenneth D. Bloch; Marnik Vuylsteke; Johannes-Peter Stasch; Johan Van de Voorde; Emmanuel Buys; Peter Brouckaert

Oxidative stress, a central mediator of cardiovascular disease, results in loss of the prosthetic haem group of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), preventing its activation by nitric oxide (NO). Here we introduce Apo-sGC mice expressing haem-free sGC. Apo-sGC mice are viable and develop hypertension. The haemodynamic effects of NO are abolished, but those of the sGC activator cinaciguat are enhanced in apo-sGC mice, suggesting that the effects of NO on smooth muscle relaxation, blood pressure regulation and inhibition of platelet aggregation require sGC activation by NO. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-induced hypotension and mortality are preserved in apo-sGC mice, indicating that pathways other than sGC signalling mediate the cardiovascular collapse in shock. Apo-sGC mice allow for differentiation between sGC-dependent and -independent NO effects and between haem-dependent and -independent sGC effects. Apo-sGC mice represent a unique experimental platform to study the in vivo consequences of sGC oxidation and the therapeutic potential of sGC activators.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2010

Reactive oxygen species and small-conductance calcium-dependent potassium channels are key mediators of inflammation-induced hypotension and shock

Anje Cauwels; Elke Rogge; Ben J. A. Janssen; Peter Brouckaert

Septic shock is associated with life-threatening vasodilation and hypotension. To cause vasodilation, vascular endothelium may release nitric oxide (NO), prostacyclin (PGI2), and the elusive endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF). Although NO is critical in controlling vascular tone, inhibiting NO in septic shock does not improve outcome, on the contrary, precipitating the search for alternative therapeutic targets. Using a hyperacute tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced shock model in mice, we found that shock can develop independently of the known vasodilators NO, cGMP, PGI2, or epoxyeicosatrienoic acids. However, the antioxidant tempol efficiently prevented hypotension, bradycardia, hypothermia, and mortality, indicating the decisive involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in these phenomena. Also, in classical TNF or lipopolysaccharide-induced shock models, tempol protected significantly. Experiments with (cell-permeable) superoxide dismutase or catalase, N-acetylcysteine and apocynin suggest that the ROS-dependent shock depends on intracellular


Critical Care Medicine | 2014

A multiscale entropy-based tool for scoring severity of systemic inflammation.

Benjamin Vandendriessche; Harlinde Peperstraete; Elke Rogge; Peter Cauwels; Eric Hoste; Oliver Stiedl; Peter Brouckaert; Anje Cauwels


European Urban and Regional Studies | 2014

No region without individual catalysts? Exploring region formation processes in Flanders (Belgium)

Lies Messely; Nick Schuermans; Joost Dessein; Elke Rogge

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PLOS ONE | 2013

The Soluble Guanylate Cyclase Activator BAY 58-2667 Protects against Morbidity and Mortality in Endotoxic Shock by Recoupling Organ Systems

Benjamin Vandendriessche; Elke Rogge; Vera Goossens; Peter Vandenabeele; Johannes Peter Stasch; Peter Brouckaert; Anje Cauwels


Cardiovascular Research | 2013

TLR2 activation causes no morbidity or cardiovascular failure, despite excessive systemic nitric oxide production

Anje Cauwels; Benjamin Vandendriessche; Jennyfer Bultinck; Benedicte Descamps; Elke Rogge; Tom Van Nieuwenhuysen; Magdalena Sips; Christian Vanhove; Peter Brouckaert

radicals. Potassium channels activated by ATP (KATP) or calcium (KCa) are important mediators of vascular relaxation. While NO and PGI2-induced vasodilation involves KATP and large-conductance BKCa channels, small-conductance SKCa channels mediate vasodilation induced by EDHF. Interestingly, also SKCa inhibition completely prevented the ROS-dependent shock. Our data thus indicate that intracellular


BMC Pharmacology | 2009

NO-insensitive sGCbeta1 H105F knockin mice: if NO has no place to go

Robrecht Thoonen; Emmanuel Buys; Anje Cauwels; Elke Rogge; Sofie Nimmegeers; Maureen Van den Hemel; Tino Hochepied; Johan Van de Voorde; Johannes-Peter Stasch; Peter Brouckaert

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Hubert Gulinck

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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