- 15 tumors by investigating the pair of x-linked isoenzymes.
Benditt and Benditt (1973) (author's reference 40) investigated
by this means individual atherosclerotic plaques from various regions

of the aorta and common iliac arteries of 4 human females.

The data

were reported to show that the fibrous caps of the atheromatous
plaques were composed of cells that produce solely or predominantly
one of the two isoenzymes, whereas samples of artery wall media and
intima were regularly composed of a mixture of the two isoenzyme cell
types.
These investigators considered an alternative to the injury-repair
hypothesis of spontaneous atherosclerosis on the basis of the following

considerations:

cells of spontaneous atherosclerotic lesions differ

from cells of normal artery wall and cells populating a repair site
in size, composition of associated extracellular material (e.g.
preponderance of collagen rather than elastin), and in the absence
of intercellular junctions.

These investigators stated that these

differences and the results of their enzyme analysis of plaques and
normal vessel comoonents imply that atherosclerotic plaques in human
beings arise by another mechanism.
suggest two possibilities:

They stated that these features

either the cells of athercsclerotic plaques

“derive from a population of cells different from those of the normal

arterial media or they are transformed cells, and if the latter is so,
cells of atherosclerotic plaques, like those of the benign smooth

muscle tnmors of the uterine, could be expected to be monoclonal.
It is at this point that Benditt and Benditt seem to have used the
term, monoclonal, to suggest origin not only from one of the two

Select target paragraph3