AUTHOR=Ohta Takuya , Yoshikawa Soichiro , Tabakawa Yuya , Yamaji Kayoko , Ishiwata Kenji , Shitara Hiroshi , Taya Choji , Oh-hora Masatsugu , Kawano Yohei , Miyake Kensuke , Yamanishi Yoshinori , Yonekawa Hiromichi , Watanabe Naohiro , Kanuka Hirotaka , Karasuyama Hajime TITLE=Skin CD4+ Memory T Cells Play an Essential Role in Acquired Anti-Tick Immunity through Interleukin-3-Mediated Basophil Recruitment to Tick-Feeding Sites JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=Volume 8 - 2017 YEAR=2017 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01348 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2017.01348 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=Ticks, blood-sucking arthropods, serve as vectors for transmission of infectious diseases including Lyme borreliosis. After tick infestation, several animal species develop resistance to subsequent infestations, reducing the risk of transmission. In a mouse model, basophils reportedly infiltrate tick-feeding sites during the 2nd but not 1st infestation and play a crucial role in the manifestation of acquired tick resistance. However, the mechanism underlying basophil recruitment to the 2nd tick-feeding site remains ill-defined. Here we investigated cells and their products responsible for the basophil recruitment. Little or no basophil infiltration was detected in T cell-deficient mice, and adoptive transfer of CD4+ but not CD8+ T cells reconstituted it. Il3 gene expression was highly upregulated at the 2nd tick-feeding site, and adoptive transfer of IL-3-sufficient but not -deficient CD4+ T cells conferred the basophil infiltration on T cell-deficient mice, indicating the CD4+ T cell-derived IL-3 is essential for the basophil recruitment. Notably, IL-3+ resident CD4+ memory T cells were detected even before the 2nd infestation in previously-uninfested skin distant from the 1st tick-feeding site. Taken together, IL-3 produced locally by skin CD4+ memory T cells appears to play a crucial role in basophil recruitment to the 2nd tick-feeding site.