Serum components in which embryos are cultured in vitro are very important for normal embryonic
development. In this study, rat serum was fractionated using Macrosep filters to study the effect of a single
growth factor. The fractionated serum, both that containing only material greater than 30 kDa molecular
weight (> 30 kDa) and that from which material between 30 kDa and 50 kDa had been removed
(< 30 kDa + > 50 kDa), caused significant embryonic growth retardation. Addition of different
concentrations of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF, 18 kDa), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF,
45 kDa) and platelet-derived endothelial growth factor (PD-ECGF, 45 kDa), to fractionated serum (bFGF
to > 30 kDa serum and VEGF or PD-ECGF to < 30 kDa + > 50 kDa serum) partially restored embryonic
growth and development according to a morphological scoring system and protein assay. This restoration
was clear by all criteria, as well as in yolk sac vascularisation and heart development. The growth promoting
effects of all 3 factors were significant but did not reach the level seen in embryos grown in whole rat serum.
The effect of these growth factors was also investigated on anembryonic yolk sac development using a
concentration for which maximum whole embryonic growth was seen (128 ng/ml bFGF, 1.6 ng/ml VEGF
and 4 ng/ml PD-ECGF), and significant anembryonic yolk sac development was found. These findings
suggest that the angiogenic factors may have a growth promoting effect on total embryonic development
and vascularisation.