AUTHOR=Chung Eun Joo , Park Soyoung , Kim Su-Hwan , Choi Ju-yeon , Jeong Hye-Sook , Ko Jae-Hoon , Song Joon Young , Lee Young Jae TITLE=Impaired and restored CD8+ T cell responses to a sequentially mutated spike epitope in Omicron variants JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1684193 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2025.1684193 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=In the post-pandemic era, SARS-CoV-2 variants continue to circulate and evolve. T cell-mediated immunity is essential for antiviral defense, but its evasion by emerging variants remains poorly defined. In this study, we screened spike-derived CD8+ T cell epitopes using bioinformatic algorithms and validated them experimentally in COVID-19 vaccine recipients. LYNSASFSTF (LYN), located in the receptor-binding domain (S368–377), was identified as an HLA-A*24:02-restricted epitope harboring mutations observed in Omicron BA.1 (S371L, S373P, and S375F) and BA.2 (S371F, S373P, S375F, and T376A). BA.2 mutations more profoundly attenuated LYN-specific cellular immunity than those from BA.1 with T376A as a major contributor to immune evasion, as supported by structural analysis of altered peptide–HLA interactions. This effect was mitigated by BA.1/BA.2 breakthrough infection and appears unlikely to persist in the currently dominant NB.1.8.1 lineage, where the LYN sequence remains conserved. Our findings suggest that LYN may function both as an immune-evasive hotspot and as a cross-reactive epitope, underscoring the importance of continued epitope-level surveillance as future variants emerge.