We compared the effects of mild hypercholesterolemia and repeated endotoxin infusions on the biochemical composition of aortic intima and inner media of 24 piglets divided into 4 groups 5 days after weaning: controls on normal diet (group I); normal diet and endotoxin (group II); fat-supplemented diet (group III); and fat-supplemented diet and endotoxin (group IV). It was found that mild hypercholesterolemia increased the concentration of arterial esterified cholesterol and the relative amount of the fraction containing chondroitin sulphates A and C in total glycosaminoglycans. Endotoxin infusions partly prevented the increase of serum cholesterol caused by the fat-supplemented diet but had no independent effect on the arterial biochemical composition; nor did they affect the biochemical changes caused by hypercholesterolemia. When the results of all groups were combined, chondroitin sulphates A and C showed a significant positive correlation with the concentration of arterial esterified cholesterol and the percentage of linoleic acid in arterial cholesteryl esters. Serum total cholesterol did not correlate with arterial cholesterol fractions, but the ratio of high density lipoprotein-cholesterol to total serum cholesterol showed a negative association with arterial esterified cholesterol. The present findings indicate that (1) mild hypercholesterolemia is atherogenic in young piglets, and (2) changes in arterial glycosaminoglycan composition might be one of the earliest biochemical alterations in atherogenesis.