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Review
. 2025 Nov 18.
doi: 10.1038/s41577-025-01238-2. Online ahead of print.

Guidelines for T cell nomenclature

David Masopust  1 Amit Awasthi  2 Rémy Bosselut  3 David G Brooks  4   5 Marcus Buggert  6 Kenji Chamoto  7   8 Weiguo Cui  9 Chen Dong  10 Donna L Farber  11   12 Thomas Gebhardt  13 Carmen Gerlach  14   15   16 Ananda Goldrath  17   18 Philip D Greenberg  19   20   21   22 J Scott Hale  23 Adrian Hayday  24   25   26 Dirk Homann  27   28   29 Matteo Iannacone  30   31 Stephen C Jameson  32 Marc K Jenkins  33 Nikhil S Joshi  34 Susan M Kaech  35 Axel Kallies  13   36 Alice O Kamphorst  28   37   38   39 Mark H Kaplan  40 Paul Klenerman  41 Marco Künzli  42 Antonio Lanzavecchia  43 Georg M Lauer  44   45   46 Enrico Lugli  47 Andrew D Luster  48 Laura K Mackay  13 M Juliana McElrath  49 Scott N Mueller  13 Zaza Ndhlovu  50   51 Thumbi Ndung'u  50   51   52   53 Pamela S Ohashi  4   5 Annette Oxenius  54 Giuseppe Pantaleo  55 Marion Pepper  20 Louis J Picker  56 Clare F Quarnstrom  33 Gustavo Reyes-Terán  57 Mario Roederer  58 Pamela C Rosato  59 Gonzalo Salgado-Montes de Oca  60 Federica Sallusto  54   61 Ton N Schumacher  62   63 Daniella M Schwartz  64 Eui-Cheol Shin  65 Andrew G Soerens  33 Daniela S Thommen  63 Vaiva Vezys  33 João P B Viola  66 Bruce D Walker  50   67 Tania H Watts  5 Casey T Weaver  68 E John Wherry  69 Hai-Hui Xue  70   71 Ben Youngblood  72 Rafi Ahmed  73
Affiliations
Review

Guidelines for T cell nomenclature

David Masopust et al. Nat Rev Immunol. .

Abstract

Advances in T cell biology have revealed heterogeneity among T cell populations that is not captured by existing general nomenclature. This issue has caused an ad hoc broadening of core T cell subset definitions and the invention of new subset designations that have not been uniformly delineated. To address this issue, in this Consensus Statement, we propose guidelines that serve three goals. First, they advocate that primary research reports define the experimental basis by which relevant subsets are designated in the methods section of each study. Second, they provide standardized definitions for existing subset designations in popular use, and common experimental criteria for defining each subset are noted. Last, they present an alternative 'modular nomenclature' paradigm. The newly proposed modular nomenclature eschews conceptualization of antigen-experienced T cells as belonging to a few idealized subsets, and the nomenclature instead simply indicates individual biological properties present in a T cell population with brief descriptors. Collectively, these guidelines intend to enhance transparency in the literature while facilitating clearer communication of findings and concepts to researchers, students and clinicians.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

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