alpha(1)-Antichymotrypsin is an acute phase protein that protects the tissues from damage by proteolytic enzymes, but previous studies have shown that alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin within the lungs of patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema is intact but inactive as an inhibitor. Ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by blue Sepharose and DNA-Sepharose chromatography was used to isolate small amounts of intact, monomeric but inactive alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin from the plasma of 30 healthy blood donors. This species had a higher DNA binding affinity with more anodal electrophoretic mobility than native alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin and was conformationally stable against thermal denaturation, 8 M urea, and 7 M guanidinium chloride. The protein was unable to accept synthetic reactive loop peptides, and the reactive loop was resistant to proteolytic cleavage at the P-5-P-4 bond but could be cleaved between P-1' and P-3'. These data suggest that this new alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin species was in a conformation similar to those of the crystallographically determined latent serpins, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and antithrombin. alpha(1)-Antichymotrypsin from lung lavage migrated with the same electrophoretic mobility as the putative latent alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin, suggesting that this is the inactive conformation described previously in the lungs of patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema. This conformational transition of alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin, from an active to an inactive state, within the lung may play an important role in the pathogenesis of chronic lung disease.