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Dive into the research topics where Barbora Schutová is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbora Schutová.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2009

Prenatal methamphetamine exposure affects the mesolimbic dopaminergic system and behavior in adult offspring

Vera Bubenikova-Valesova; Petr Kačer; Kamila Syslová; Lukas Rambousek; Martin Janovsky; Barbora Schutová; Lenka Hrubá; Romana Šlamberová

Methamphetamine is a commonly abused psychostimulant that causes addiction and is often abused by pregnant women. Acute or chronic administration of methamphetamine elevates the levels of the extracellular monoamine neurotransmitters, such as dopamine.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2009

Effect of methamphetamine exposure and cross-fostering on sensorimotor development of male and female rat pups

Lenka Hrubá; Barbora Schutová; Romana Šlamberová; Marie Pometlová; Richard Rokyta

The present study tested the hypothesis that cross-fostering influences the development of rat pups. Mothers were exposed daily to injection of methamphetamine (M) (5 mg/kg) or saline for 9 weeks: 3 weeks prior to impregnation, throughout gestation and lactation periods. Control females animals without any injections were used. On postnatal day (PD) 1, pups were cross-fostered so that each mother received four pups of her own and eight pups from the mothers with the other two treatments. Offspring were tested for sensorimotor development in preweaning period by using tests of: negative geotaxis, tail pull, righting reflexes, rotarod and bar-holding. Further, the pups were weighed daily. Our results showed that birth weight in prenatally M-exposed pups was lower than in control or saline-exposed pups. Prenatally M-exposed pups gained less weight than control or saline-exposed pups regardless of postnatal treatment and sex. Further, our data demonstrated that prenatal and postnatal M exposure impairs sensorimotor functions in most of the tests. On the other hand, the negative effect of prenatal M exposure was partially suppressed in prenatally M-exposed pups by cross-fostering to control dams. Our hypothesis that cross-fostering may affect postnatal development of pups was confirmed.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2010

The effect of methamphetamine on social interaction of adult male rats

Romana Šlamberová; Anna Mikulecká; Marie Pometlová; Barbora Schutová; Lenka Hrubá; Kateryna Deykun

The effect of psychostimulants on social behavior still remains unclear. Therefore the aim of the present study was to assess the effect of low doses of methamphetamine (MA) on social interaction (SI) in adult male rats. Rats were tested in three environmental conditions: (1) dimly lit, familiar environment, (2) dimly lit, unfamiliar environment and (3) intensely lit, unfamiliar environment considered to be low, middle and high stress, respectively. In each condition different set of animals was used. Rats were always divided into five groups. Control (without injection), saline (with 1 ml/kg saline injection) and three MA groups (doses: 0.5, 1 and 1.5mg/kg). Injections were applied 30 min prior to testing. Always a pair of unfamiliar rats of the same treatment group was tested. Their behavior was video recorded for 5 min in an open field. Times spent by SI (following, climbing, genital investigation, etc.) and non-social behavior (locomotion, rearing) were analyzed using a two-way ANOVA (drug treatment x stress condition). Our data demonstrate that all doses of MA, reduced SI. In addition, the unfamiliarity of the arena increased exploratory behavior (locomotion and rearing) in all treatment groups, while the SI was affected by the environmental condition only in controls or saline-treated rats, but not in MA-treated groups. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that MA administration impairs SI in dose- and stress condition-specific manner, however, some of our results may be due to increase locomotion and rearing induced by MA.


Physiology & Behavior | 2010

Responsiveness to methamphetamine in adulthood is altered by prenatal exposure in rats

Barbora Schutová; Lenka Hrubá; Marie Pometlová; Richard Rokyta; Romana Šlamberová

Methamphetamine (MA) is a drug causing potent psychomotor activation. The aim of the present study was: (1) to assess the effect of prenatal and acute MA administration on behavior in adult male rats and (2) to find out if the prenatal exposure to MA increases sensitivity to acute MA application in adulthood. Behavior of adult male rats prenatally exposed to MA (5mg/kg) or saline was tested in Open field (OF) and Elevated plus maze (EPM). Subcutaneously administered MA (1mg/kg) or saline were used as challenge in adulthood, 30 min prior to testing. Our results showed that prenatal MA did not have an effect on baseline behavior in either of the tests. By contrast, acute MA increased overall psychomotor activity by increasing locomotion and exploratory behavior and decreasing comforting behavior. Moreover, adult rats prenatally exposed to MA exhibited increased sniffing and decreased rearing after acute MA dose in adulthood relative to prenatally saline-exposed rats. In addition, while acute MA application decreased anxiety in rats prenatally exposed to MA, rats prenatally exposed to saline were less sensitive to the anxiolytic effects of MA. Our results indicate that changes caused by prenatal exposure to psychostimulants may become apparent as different reactivity to drugs of abuse when an individual encounters them later in life. In addition, we found that the anxiolytic effect of acute MA (1mg/kg) probably depends also on the reactivity to stress and the activity of hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis.


Physiology & Behavior | 2012

Sex differences in anxiety-like behavior and locomotor activity following prenatal and postnatal methamphetamine exposure in adult rats.

Lenka Hrubá; Barbora Schutová; Romana Šlamberová

The aim of the present study was to investigate the impact of prenatal and postnatal methamphetamine (MA) exposure on behavior and anxiety in adult male and female rats. Mothers were daily exposed to injection of MA (5 mg/kg) or saline (S): prior to impregnation and throughout gestation and lactation periods. On postnatal day 1, pups were cross-fostered so that each mother raised 6 saline-exposed pups and 6 MA-exposed pups. Based on the prenatal and postnatal exposure 4 experimental groups (S/S, S/MA, MA/S, MA/MA) were tested in the Open field (OF) and in the Elevated plus maze (EPM) in adulthood. Locomotion, exploration, immobility and comforting behavior were evaluated in the OF, while anxiety was assessed in the EPM. While prenatal MA exposure did not affect behavior and anxiety in adulthood, postnatal MA exposure (i.e. MA administration to lactating mothers) induced long-term changes. Specifically, adult female rats in diestrus and adult males postnatally exposed to MA via breast milk (S/MA and MA/MA) had decreased locomotion and exploratory behavior in the OF and showed increased anxiety-like behavior in the EPM when compared to female rats in diestrus or males postnatally exposed to saline (S/S and MA/S). In adult females in proestrus, postnatal exposure to MA affected only exploratory behavior in the OF when compared to rats in proestrus postnatally exposed to saline. Thus, the present study shows that postnatal exposure to MA via breast milk impairs behavior in unfamiliar environment and anxiety-like behavior of adult male and female rats more than prenatal MA exposure.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2013

Gender differences in behavioral changes elicited by prenatal methamphetamine exposure and application of the same drug in adulthood

Barbora Schutová; Lenka Hrubá; Richard Rokyta; Romana Šlamberová

The aim of the present study was to compare the response to sub-chronic application of methamphetamine (MA) in adulthood in male and female rats prenatally exposed to the same drug. The spontaneous locomotor activity and exploratory behavior of adult male and female rats prenatally exposed to 5 mg/kg MA or saline (SAL) were tested in a Laboras apparatus (Metris B.V., Netherlands) for five consecutive days, 1 hr daily. MA 1 mg/kg or SAL were used as a challenge prior to testing. Our results showed that rats prenatally exposed to MA were more sensitive to sub-chronic administration of MA in adulthood than prenatally SAL-exposed rats. However, this sensitizing effect of prenatal MA exposure was manifested differently in males and females. In contrast, prenatal MA exposure decreased baseline locomotion in females. This study indicates that gender plays an important role in the sensitivity to MA during prenatal development and in adulthood.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2011

Perinatal effect of methamphetamine on nociception in adult Wistar rats.

Anna Yamamotova; Lenka Hrubá; Barbora Schutová; Richard Rokyta; Romana Šlamberová

Methamphetamine is a psychostimulant drug which causes the release of monoamine neurotransmitters. Although drugs of abuse are known to have analgesic effects, there is a lack of evidence regarding the effect of prenatal exposure to methamphetamine on nociception in adulthood. Adult Wistar rats whose mothers had received daily exposure to methamphetamine (5 mg/kg; s.c.) or saline, during gestation or gestation and lactation periods, were examined for: (1) gender differences in nociception; (2) an association between nociception and gross‐motor behavior in the plantar test; (3) effects of cross‐fostering on nociception; and (4) analgesic effects of an acute injection of methamphetamine (1 mg/kg s.c.). Nociception was tested using the plantar test on postnatal days 85–90. Prenatal methamphetamine increased sensitivity to pain on forelimbs (p < 0.0001) and hind limbs (p < 0.05) in females only. Prenatal methamphetamine treated male rats fostered by adoptive injection stressed mothers had higher sensitivity to pain than prenatally injection stressed rats fostered by methamphetamine treated mothers (p < 0.05). Acute methamphetamine induced analgesia faster in prenatally methamphetamine exposed rats than in controls. In all groups, analgesia increased in the cranio‐caudal direction (p < 0.0001). From our behavioral data it can be concluded that exposure to methamphetamine during the prenatal period completely dissociates the relationship between nociception and intensity of overall behavior observed in intact animals in adulthood. Thus, our results indicate that perinatal exposure to psychostimulants may have long‐term impact on several functions related to dopaminergic system.


Behavioural Pharmacology | 2011

Sex differences in social interaction of methamphetamine-treated rats.

Romana Šlamberová; Anna Mikulecká; Marie Pometlová; Barbora Schutová; Lenka Hrubá; Kateryna Deykun

Our previous study showed that single injection of methamphetamine decreases social interaction (SI) in a dose-dependent manner that was further affected by stressful environment conditions. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of methamphetamine and its interaction with gonadal hormones on SI. Adult male and female rats were gonadectomized and assigned to testosterone-treated and oil-treated groups in male rats and estradiol-treated and oil-treated groups in female rats, respectively. Hormones were administered 30 min before each habituation in the open field. All four hormonal groups were further divided to control (without injection), saline (1 ml/kg saline injection), and methamphetamine (1 mg/kg) groups. Injections were applied 30 min before the SI test. The total duration and the total number of SI and nonsocial behavioral patterns were assessed. This study showed that an acute methamphetamine administration in a dose of 1 mg/kg decreased different types of SI in both sexes. In contrast, the same dose of methamphetamine increased locomotion and rearing behavior in male and female rats. The frequency and/or duration of SI (especially mutual sniffing and allogrooming) was lower in adult female rats relative to gonadectomized male rats, but locomotion was increased in female relative to male rats regardless of the presence or absence of gonadal hormones. In conclusion, this study is novel especially because it examines SI in both sexes in relation to the presence or absence of gonadal hormones.


Epilepsy Research | 2008

Does prenatal methamphetamine exposure affect seizure susceptibility in adult rats with acute administration of the same drug

Romana Šlamberová; Klára Bernášková; I. Matějovská; Barbora Schutová

The aim of the present study was to investigate whether sensitivity to flurothyl seizures after an acute methamphetamine (MA) administration is different in prenatally MA-exposed adult rats than in controls without prenatal drug exposure. Adult male and female rats exposed prenatally to MA (5mg/kg), saline or neither (controls) were divided into groups; one group received acute MA (1mg/kg s.c.) injection and the other group received saline. Rats were then challenged with flurothyl at a constant flow rate to induce seizures. The threshold of the first focal clonus, clonic seizures and tonic-clonic seizures were analyzed. EFFECTS OF PRENATAL DRUG EXPOSURE: In animals without acute MA administration prior to seizure testing, prenatal MA exposure decreased threshold of the first clonus relative to control animals. This decrease in threshold was not apparent in groups pretreated with acute MA injection. EFFECTS OF ACUTE MA ADMINISTRATION: There was an increased threshold to both, first focal clonus and clonic seizures in animals with acute MA injection than in animals without it. The increase induced by acute MA pretreatment was higher in prenatally MA-exposed animals relative to controls. Further, clonic seizures were shorter and developed faster into tonic-clonic seizures in these acutely injected animals compared to animals without acute MA injection. EFFECTS OF HORMONES: The threshold of all measured attributes was decreased in males. Estrous cycle influences did not lead to changes between groups of prenatal exposure or acute MA administration. Threshold of tonic-clonic seizures was increased in females in proestrus/estrus stage of the estrous cycle relative to diestrous females. Our study suggests that prenatal MA exposure affects the sensitivity of adult rats to the effect of acute MA treatment prior to flurothyl seizures relative to controls.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2010

Effect of methamphetamine exposure and cross-fostering on cognitive function in adult male rats.

Lenka Hrubá; Barbora Schutová; Marie Pometlová; Richard Rokyta; Romana Šlamberová

The aim of our study was to examine the effect of prenatal methamphetamine (MA) exposure and cross-fostering on cognitive functions of adult male rats tested in Morris water maze (MWM). Rat mothers were exposed daily to injection of MA (5mg/kg) or saline for 9 weeks: prior to impregnation, throughout gestation and lactation periods. Females without any injections were used as an absolute control. On postnatal day 1, pups were cross-fostered so that each mother raised 4 pups of her own and 8 pups from the mothers with the other two treatments. Four types of tests were used: (1) Place navigation test (Learning), (2) Probe test (Probe), (3) Retention memory test (Memory) and (4) Visible platform task. Our results demonstrate that the prenatal exposure to MA does not impact learning and memory, while postnatal exposure to MA shows impairments in cognition. In the test of learning, all animals fostered to MA-treated dams had longer latencies, bigger search error and used lower spatial strategies than the animals fostered to control or saline-treated mother, regardless of prenatal exposure. Regardless of postnatal exposure, the animals prenatally exposed to saline swam faster in all the tests than the animals prenatally exposed to MA and controls, respectively. This study indicates that postnatal but not prenatal exposure to MA affects learning in adult male rats. However, it is still not clear whether these impairments are due to a direct effect of MA on neuronal structure or due to an indirect effect of MA mediated by impaired maternal care.

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Romana Šlamberová

Charles University in Prague

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Lenka Hrubá

Charles University in Prague

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Marie Pometlová

Charles University in Prague

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Richard Rokyta

Charles University in Prague

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I. Matějovská

Charles University in Prague

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Klára Bernášková

Charles University in Prague

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Anna Yamamotova

Charles University in Prague

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Anna Mikulecká

Charles University in Prague

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Eva Macúchová

Charles University in Prague

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Kateryna Deykun

Charles University in Prague

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