Abstract: | Vascular wall fibrinolytic system proteins are believed to play a pivotal role in atherogenesis. Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) influence persistence of luminal thrombi and proteolysis of extracellular matrix, respectively. The major physiologic inhibitor of t-PA and u-PA is plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1). All three of these fibrinolytic system proteins have been detected in vascular endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and macrophages by light microscopic immunohistochemistry. This study was undertaken to delineate, by immunoelectron microscopy, the loci of PAI-1 in smooth muscle cells from intact morphologically normal and atherosclerotic human arteries as well as in isolated and cultured smooth muscle cells from arteries. In intact vessels, PAI-1 immunoreactivity was associated with contractile filaments in cells in both normal and atherosclerotic tissues. Lipid-laden smooth muscle cells in atherosclerotic vessels were mainly of the synthetic phenotype and displayed lesser amounts of PAI-1 associated with rough endoplasmic reticulum and contractile filaments. Isolated smooth muscle cells exhibited either a contractile or synthetic phenotype. In the cells with a contractile phenotype, PAI-1 was associated with the contractile elements, whereas in the cells with a synthetic phenotype, the PAI-1 was associated predominantly with elements of the endoplasmic reticulum. Because PAI-1 is associated predominantly with contractile filaments in smooth muscle cells, the net amount of immunodetectable PAI-1 appears to be greater in contractile compared with synthetic phenotype cells. |