Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite surface protein 2 (SSP2), also known as TRAP, is included in experimental human malaria vaccines because Plasmodium yoelii SSP2 is the target of protective CD8+ CTL that eliminate P. yoelii-infected hepatocytes in mice. We now report that immunization with a synthetic branched-chain peptide including four copies of a PySSP2 sequence, NPNEPS, and two tetanus toxin T helper epitopes in the adjuvant TiterMax, or with an 18 amino acid peptide (NPNEPS)3 in the adjuvant protects A/J, but not BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice. Transfer of T lymphocyte-enriched immune splenocytes protects naive mice; in vivo depletion of CD4+ T cells eliminates vaccine-induced protection; and in vivo treatment with anti-IFN-gamma reverses vaccine-induced activity against infected hepatocytes. Lymph node cells from immunized A/J, BALB/c, and C57BL/6 mice recognize the (NPNEPS)3 peptide in vitro. However, the protected A/J mice respond with a predominantly Th1 pattern of lymphocyte response, and the non-protected strains of mice respond with a Th2 pattern. There are many examples of CD4+ T cells transferring protection against infectious organisms. However, to our knowledge, this is the first formal demonstration that immunization with a linear synthetic peptide induces CD4+ T cell-dependent, IFN-gamma dependent, genetically restricted sterile protective immunity against an infectious agent.