Cerebral ischemic disease often causes morbidity and mortality, while the induction of new blood vessels is expected to provide a therapeutic effect in this occlusive cerebrovascular disease. In this study, we utilized two replication-deficient adenoviral vectors containing cDNA from basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), a well-known angiogenic factor, and examined whether biological angiogenic activity of adenovirally gene-transferred bFGF could be observed in the rat brain. One vector contained native cDNA from bFGF without the secretory signal sequence and the other contained the same cDNA fused with an interleukin-2 secretory signal sequence. After ventricular administration of these viral vectors, gene-transferred cells demonstrated a high immunoreactivity against the anti-bFGF antibody and a remarkably high concentration of bFGF was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid. A semiquantitative analysis of angiogenic activity revealed that bFGF gene transfer induced angiogenesis in normal rat brains, with a more pronounced angiogenic effect seen with the vector of a secreted form than with the vector without a secretory signal sequence. These results suggest that bFGF gene transfer using these adenoviral vectors might be useful for the treatment of ischemic cerebrovascular disease.