We examined a potential role of gammadelta T cells in protective immunity to blood-stage Plasmodium berghei XAT infection. Plasmodium berghei XAT is an attenuated variant of the lethal strain P. berghei NK65 and its infection is self-resolving in immune competent mice. To determine whether gammadelta T cells are essential for the resolution of P. berghei XAT malaria, mice were depleted of gammadelta T cells with anti-TCRgammadelta antibody treatment. Although mice that had received control antibody resolved infections, mice received anti-TCRgammadelta antibody could not control their infections and eventually died. Spleen cells from infected mice produced IFN-gamma and nitric oxide (NO) within the first week of infection, however, levels of IFN-gamma and NO in gammadelta T cell-depleted mice were significantly lower than in control mice. To examine whether gammadelta T cells are involved in the antibody production, malarial-specific antibodies of the various isotypes were measured in the sera of gammadelta T cell-depleted mice and control mice. Serum levels of IgG2a, which was known to be a protective antibody in P. berghei XAT malaria, were significantly lower in gammadelta T cell-depleted mice than in control mice, whereas levels of IgG1 were comparable to those in control mice. Our results indicated that the presence of the gammadelta T cell subset was essential for resolution of blood-stage P. berghei XAT malaria and played a modulatory role in the development of Th1 response and host defense against this malarial parasites.