Increasing worldwide resistance to acaricides necessitates greater research on the identification of potential acaricide targets
in ticks to aid in the control of these serious pests of medical and veterinary importance. Historically, and most likely
in the future, acaricide targets are largely of neural origin, but our knowledge of tick neurobiology is surprisingly limited.
The tick central nervous system is a fused nerve mass, termed the synganglion. Tick synganglion material is relatively easily
accessible to most researchers and employing modern amplification methods of complementary-DNA construction is readily amenable
for gene cloning investigations. The various tick neurotransmitter systems are described with emphasis on our current knowledge
of both existing and potential acaricide targets at the molecular level. We describe the impact of mass gene sequencing (expressed
sequence tag and genome projects), advances in bioinformatics and RNA-interference on target identification and validation.
Keywords Ticks - Acaricides - Neural - Target - Neurotransmitter