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Dive into the research topics where Lubor Kostal is active.

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Featured researches published by Lubor Kostal.


Journal of Pineal Research | 1999

Perinatal development of circadian melatonin production in domestic chicks

Michal Zeman; Eberhard Gwinner; Iveta Herichová; D. Lamošová; Lubor Kostal

Abstract: In contrast to the situation in mammals, in which circadian melatonin production by the pineal gland does not begin until some time after birth, the development of pineal gland rhythmicity is an embryonic event in the precocial domestic fowl. A distinct melatonin rhythm was found in 19‐d‐old chick embryos maintained under light:dark (LD) 16:8. No significant variation in melatonin levels was detected in embryos exposed to LD 8:16. The melatonin rhythm in the pineal gland and plasma of chick embryos incubated for 18 d in LD 12:12 persisted for 2 d in constant darkness indicating that melatonin production is under circadian control at least from the end of embryonic life. A I‐d exposure to a LD cycle during the first postembryonic day was sufficient to entrain the melatonin rhythm, and previous embryonic exposure to either LD or constant darkness (DD) neither modified this rapid synchronization nor did it affect the melatonin pattern during the two subsequent days in DD. It is suggested that, in contrast to the situation in mammals, the avian embryo has evolved its own early circadian melatonin‐producing system because, as a consequence of its extrauterine development, it cannot use the system of its mother.


Physiology & Behavior | 2005

Chicks from a high and low feather pecking line of laying hens differ in apomorphine sensitivity

Ym van Hierden; Jm Koolhaas; Lubor Kostal; P Vyboh; M Sedlackova; M Rajman; M. Juráni; S.M. Korte; Yvonne M. van Hierden; Jaap M. Koolhaas; L’ubor Košt’ál; Monika Sedlačková

Proactive rodents show a larger behavioral response to apomorphine (APO) than reactive copers, suggesting a more sensitive DA system in proactive individuals. Previously, chicks from a high feather pecking (HFP) and low feather pecking line (LFP) have been suggested to display a proactive and reactive coping strategy, respectively. Therefore, at approximately 4 weeks of age, the behavior of 48 LFP and 48 HFP chicks in response to an APO injection was studied using an open field. Another objective of the present study was to determine whether behavioral variation (in an open field) between HFP and LFP birds, after APO injection, is also reflected by variation of D(1) and D(2) receptor densities in the brain. Receptor binding capacities were assessed by measuring specific binding of tritiated D(1) and D(2) receptor ligands in different regions of the brain of control HFP and LFP chicks. In the present study, it is shown that indeed HFP chicks display a more enhanced behavioral response to acute APO treatment (0.5 mg/kg BW) than LFP birds in an open field. This difference was not reflected by variation of D(1) and D(2) receptor densities in the brain between both lines.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 1994

Influence of pharmacological manipulation of dopamine and opioid receptor subtypes on stereotyped behaviour of restricted-fed fowls

Lubor Kostal; C.John Savory

Effects on environmentally induced oral stereotypes (object pecking and drinker directed activity) of antagonists and agonists of dopamine and opioid receptor subtypes were examined in individually caged broiler breeder fowls subjected to chronic food restriction. Three drugs in each category were injected intravenously at three doses, and their effects compared with those of a saline control treatment. With dopamine antagonists, inhibition of both stereotypes was most marked with haloperidol (D2), intermediate with clozapine (D4), and lowest with SCH 23390 (D1). Increased sitting with the high doses of these three drugs may reflect sedation. With dopamine agonists, SKF 38393 (D1) suppressed both stereotypes slightly, quinpirole (D3) did so consistently and potently, possibly reflecting preferential presynaptic action, while bromocriptine (D2) inhibited drinker-directed activity consistently, but its initial suppression of object pecking changed to delayed stimulation with the high dose. This biphasic effect of bromocriptine may reflect change from pre- to postsynaptic action. Two of the opioid antagonists, naltrexone (mu) and MR 2266 (kappa, but also mu), inhibited object pecking partially, while naltrindole (delta) and the opioid agonists fentanyl (mu), BUBU (delta), and PD 117302 (kappa) had delayed and minor effects. These results suggest that expression of object pecking, but not necessarily drinker-directed activity, depends more on activation of D2 dopamine receptors than D1 receptors, the role of D3 and D4 receptors is less clear, and activation of mu and possibly kappa opioid receptors may play a contributory role.


Physiology & Behavior | 1997

Application of a Radiotelemetry System for Chronic Measurement of Blood Pressure, Heart Rate, EEG, and Activity in the Chicken

Savory Cj; Lubor Kostal

This paper reports the first successful chronic monitoring (for 30 days) of blood pressure, heart rate, EEG, and physical activity in a freely moving bird, following (described) implantation of a commercially available (Data Sciences International) radiotelemetry device in a 1.6-kg broiler chicken. The tip of the devices pressure sensing catheter was introduced into the descending aorta via a leg (ischiadic) artery and, although the catheter was tied in place, circulation in the leg was maintained and leg function was not impaired. EEG was recorded from the devices paired sensing electrodes positioned on the surface of the telencephalon. Physiological and activity data collected by the radiotelemetry system over 2 complete 24-h periods, 1 and 4 weeks after implantation of the device, were analyzed with the systems own (Dataquest LabPRO) analysis software. The results presented are discussed mainly in terms of variation between light and dark periods.


Physiology & Behavior | 2006

Is expression of some behaviours associated with de-arousal in restricted-fed chickens?

C.John Savory; Lubor Kostal

Broiler breeder chickens show apparently abnormal behaviours when subjected to routine quantitative food restriction during rearing. By using a combination of videorecording and radiotelemetry, this experiment addressed the question of whether such behaviours are associated with de-arousal. In each of 2 years, 3 female chickens had radiotelemetry devices (Data Sciences) implanted surgically at 12 weeks of age, for measuring putative physiological indices of arousal (heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, telencephalic EEG). Subsequently, when caged individually and moving freely, they were monitored over 2 days when their daily food ration (60 g pellets provided at 0900 h) was all eaten in <10 min. Their behaviour (nine categories) and arousal indices were recorded in every minute during the photoperiod (0700 to 1900 h), using special computer software for videorecording (Noldus) and radiotelemetry (Dataquest LabPRO) analyses. Most time was spent in behaviour categories stand, push bar and feeder directed. Heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, and relative powers in delta (1-4 Hz) and theta (4-8 Hz) frequency bands of the EEG power spectrum were all highest during feeder directed, whereas heart rate, temperature and delta EEG were all lowest during stand. Judging from significant correlation coefficients between times spent in different behaviours and corresponding physiological variables, across the day, and between ranked mean values of the 6 birds, other trends were also evident. For example, total time spent in all (non-food directed) oral behaviours was related positively to an index of de-arousal (slow wave EEG) and negatively to an index of arousal (heart rate). Collectively, however, these results provide apparently conflicting evidence of both arousal and de-arousal being associated with every behaviour analysed. This conclusion is explicable if abnormal behaviours are related to arousal in a homeostatic way [Savory, C.J., Kostal, L. Temporal patterning of oral stereotypies in restricted-fed fowls: 1. Investigations with a single daily meal. Int. J. Comp. Psychol. 1996, 9:117-139.], being both stimulated by it and reducing it.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 1996

Behavioral responses of restricted-fed fowls to pharmacological manipulation of 5-HT and GABA receptor subtypes

Lubor Kostal; Savory Cj

Effects on environmentally induced oral stereotypies (object pecking and drinker-directed activity) and other behavior (sitting, standing, pacing, preening), of preferential antagonists and agonists of central 5-HT and GABA receptor subtypes, were examined in individually caged broiler breeder fowls subjected to chronic food restriction. All drugs were injected intravenously at three doses, and their effects compared with a saline control treatment. The only significant (p < 0.05) effect of 5-HT antagonists [NAN-190 (5-HT1A), ketanserin (5-HT2), MDL-72222 (5-HT3)] was an increase in pacing with ketanserin (0.8 mg/kg). With 5-HT agonists, 8-OH-DPAT (5-HT1A) suppressed the two oral stereotypies and increased standing (all 1.0 mg/kg) and preening (0.2 mg/kg), alpha-methylserotonin (5-HT2) suppressed the oral stereotypies and increased sitting (all 1.0 mg/kg), and m-CPBG (5-HT3) suppressed drinker-directed activity (1.0 mg/kg). The GABA antagonists (bicuculline (GABAA), 5-aminovaleric acid (GABAB) had no effect, and of the GABA agonists [muscimol (GABAA), baclofen (GABAB)], muscimol suppressed preening and increased sitting, standing (all 1.0 mg/kg), and pacing (0.2 mg/kg). Most of the significant effects of serotonergic and GABAergic agents on behavior here appeared to reflect at least some degree of sedation, and there was no real evidence of any specific influence of these compounds on the oral stereotypies within the range of doses tested.


Physiology & Behavior | 2011

Effects of haloperidol, a dopamine D2-like receptor antagonist, on reward-related behaviors in laying hens.

Randi Oppermann Moe; Janicke Nordgreen; Andrew M. Janczak; Berry M. Spruijt; Lubor Kostal; Eystein Skjerve; Adroaldo J. Zanella; Morten Bakken

In order to investigate the involvement of dopaminergic transmission in the regulation of reward-related behaviors in laying hens, the effects of systemic injections of dopamine D2-like receptor antagonist haloperidol (0.3, 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 mg/kg s.c.) 30 min prior to a conditioned cue signaling a reward were tested and compared to the effects of a saline injection. Head movements and latency to initiate display of anticipatory behavior were significantly affected by 0.3 and 0.5 mg/kg haloperidol, respectively. More hens were found lying down resting prior to the cue at 0.5 mg/kg and higher doses, and increased latency to peck at reward and shorter duration of anticipatory behavior was significant at 2.0 mg/kg. The findings are consistent with the involvement of dopamine in control of reward-related behaviors in laying hens. It is suggested that the lowest dose of haloperidol (0.3 mg/kg) affects reward-related behaviors, whereas the effects of higher doses of haloperidol could be confounded by sedative effects. A high inter- and intra observer agreement in the assessment of head movements together with their dopamine dependency further suggest that this behavior in classical conditioning paradigm represents an indicator of the state of the reward system in laying hens that can be assessed with good reliability.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2011

Effects of divergent selection for yolk testosterone content on growth characteristics of Japanese quail.

Monika Okuliarova; Lubor Kostal; Michal Zeman

Effects of yolk androgens on postnatal growth of offspring have been widely studied but their physiological role in the growth control is not fully understood due to an inconsistency in obtained results. We investigated androgen-mediated maternal effects on postnatal growth in relation to endocrine control mechanisms using two lines of Japanese quail divergently selected for high (HET) and low (LET) egg testosterone (T) content. Embryonic growth did not differ between the lines. During the growth period HET quail were heavier and displayed longer tarsi as compared with LET quail, with more pronounced line differences in males than females. HET males were heavier than LET males from the age of 2 weeks, reached the age of maximum growth rate earlier, and displayed higher asymptotic body weight than LET males. Accelerated growth in HET males was not accompanied by increased postembryonic plasma T concentrations. Plasma triiodothyronine levels did not differ between lines while plasma thyroxine levels were decreased in HET as compared with LET female chicks. Line differences in body weight disappeared in adult quail suggesting that yolk androgens, increased in a physiological way, resulted in stimulation of juvenile growth rate in precocial Japanese quail under stable social and environmental conditions.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 1994

The role of adrenoreceptors in control of stereotyped oral behavior in restricted-fed fowls

C.John Savory; Lubor Kostal

Effects on environmentally induced oral stereotypies (object pecking and drinker-directed activity) of preferential antagonists and agonists of adrenoreceptor subtypes were examined in individually caged broiler breeder fowls subjected to chronic food restriction. Three drugs in each category were injected intravenously at three doses, and their effects compared with a saline control treatment. With the antagonists, object pecking was suppressed more by prazosin (alpha 1) and propranolol (beta) than by yohimbine (alpha 2), while drinker-directed activity showed delayed stimulation with yohimbine and propranolol. With the agonists, drinker-directed activity was suppressed more by clonidine (alpha 2) than by isoproterenol (beta) and phenylephrine (alpha 1), while object pecking was inhibited by the high doses of clonidine and isoproterenol but showed delayed stimulation with the low dose of clonidine and (nonsignificantly) the high dose of phenylephrine. Initial suppression of both oral stereotypies by the high doses of yohimbine and isoproterenol, and high and medium doses of clonidine, may have been due to sedation, because in those instances it coincided with increased sitting, an activity not normally seen. Increased standing with clonidine and the medium dose of yohimbine may also reflect sedation. When there were no significant increases in sitting or standing to indicate sedation, responses of both stereotypies were essentially the same with all three adrenoreceptor subtypes; i.e., object pecking was inhibited by the antagonist but not the agonist, while drinker-directed activity was inhibited by the agonist but not the antagonist. It is concluded that alpha 1, alpha 2, and beta adrenoreceptors are all implicated in expression of these stereotypes, and that the two activities may be differentially controlled.


Neuroscience | 2016

Dopamine D3 receptors modulate the rate of neuronal recovery, cell recruitment in Area X, and song tempo after neurotoxic damage in songbirds

Kristina Lukacova; Eva Pavukova; Lubor Kostal; Boris Bilcik; Lubica Kubikova

Songbirds, like humans, learn vocalizations and their striatum recruits new neurons in adulthood. Injury in striatal vocal nucleus Area X, involved in song learning and production in songbirds, is followed by massive regeneration. The newborn neurons arise from the subventricular zone (SVZ) rich in dopamine D3 receptors (D3Rs). The aim of this study was to investigate whether the D3Rs affect the rate of neuronal recovery in Area X. Male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) received bilateral neurotoxic lesion of Area X and were implanted with osmotic minipumps containing D3R agonist 7-OH-DPAT, antagonist U99194, or saline. Treatment with 7-OH-DPAT but not U99194 led to significant reduction of lesion size and increased numbers of migrating neuroblasts and newborn cells in the Area X. These cells were detected in the lesion border as well as the lesion center. Lesion also led to increased mRNA expression of the D3Rs in the neurogenic SVZ and in the nucleus robustus arcopallialis (RA) involved in song production. Moreover, lesion alone prolonged the song duration and this may be facilitated by D3Rs in RA. Parallel lesion and stimulation of D3Rs prolonged it even more, while blocking of D3Rs abolished the lesion-induced effect. These data suggest that D3R stimulation after striatal injury accelerates the striatal recovery and can cause behavioral alterations.

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Michal Zeman

Comenius University in Bratislava

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D. Lamošová

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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M. Juráni

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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Janicke Nordgreen

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Randi Oppermann Moe

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Iveta Herichová

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Kristina Lukacova

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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