Nanoparticles for multivalent display and delivery of vaccine antigens have emerged as
a promising avenue for enhancing B cell responses to protein subunit vaccines. Here,
we evaluated B cell responses in rhesus macaques immunized with prefusion stabilized
Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) F glycoprotein trimer compared to
nanoparticles displaying 10 or 20 copies of the same antigen. We show that multivalent
display skews antibody specificities and drives epitope-focusing of responding B cells.
Antibody cloning and repertoire sequencing revealed that focusing was driven by
expansion of clonally distinct B cells through recruitment of diverse precursors. We
identified two antibody lineages that developed either ultrapotent neutralization or
pneumovirus cross-neutralization from precursor B cells with low initial affinity for the
RSV-F immunogen. This suggests that increased avidity by multivalent display
facilitates the activation and recruitment of these cells. Diversification of the B cell
response by multivalent nanoparticle immunogens has broad implications for vaccine
design
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