Rat renal glomerular epithelial cells (SGE1 cell line) can be maintained and grown continuously in serum-free medium supplemented with insulin, iron-saturated transferrin (Tr), selenium, bovine serum albumin (BSA), linoleic acid, and epidermal growth factor (EGF). Of the growth supplements used, Tr is essential for proliferation of the cells. In the present study, we describe the use of a unique iron-chelate complex, ferric cacodylate (Fe-Cac), positively charged molecules in neutral buffer, that could almost replace Tr in serum-free culture. It even stimulated the growth of SGE1 cells more efficiently than ferric chloride (FeCl(3)) and other iron-chelate complexes, such as ferric nitrilotriacetate (Fe-NTA) and ferric citrate (Fe-Cit). The growth-stimulatory activity of Fe-Cac was exerted at iron concentrations of more than 0.01 μg/ml, whereas a 10-fold excess of iron concentration was required with FeCl(3), Fe-NTA and Fe-Cit. We observed that SGE1 cells grew until confluent, then formed hemicysts (domes) in serum-free medium containing Fe-Cac, suggesting that Fe-Cac did not merely permit cell growth but also supported polarization and organization of the cells into a functional epithelial architecture. Moreover, since the stimulatory activity of Fe-Cac was completely abolished by desferrioxamine, a strong iron chelator, it is suggested that iron is crucial for growth of SGE1 cells. When the cells were treated with suramin, an inhibitor of cellular pinocytosis and endocytosis of a large spectrum of ligands including receptor-bound growth factors, growth-stimulatory activity of Tr was inhibited, whereas the activity of Fe-Cac was not affected. These results, taken together, strongly suggest that the growth-stimulatory activity of Fe-Cac is associated with iron delivery into the cells through the cell membrane by diffusion, which is different from Tr receptor-mediated endocytosis. The use of Fe-Cac for investigating iron-regulated cell proliferation is suggested.