Electrospun fibers are excellent delivery vehicles enabling a sustained release of growth factors to elicit favorable cell responses and are increasingly used in tissue engineering. Scaffolds with specific physical/topographical features can also guide cell migration and maturation. Therefore, growth factor-loaded electrospun scaffolds with a designed topography are promising for tissue regeneration. In this investigation, aligned-fiber scaffolds composed of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanofibers incorporating a glial cell line-derived growth factor and poly (d,l-lactic acid) nanofibers incorporating a nerve growth factor were produced by electrospinning. The scaffolds provided an aligned fibrous topography and a dual release of growth factors. The rat pheochromocytoma cell (PC12 cell) response to produced non-woven and aligned-fiber scaffolds with/without growth factors was studied. The dual release of growth factors and topographical cues provided by aligned-fiber bicomponent scaffolds induced significant neurite extension, neuronal differentiation, and neurite alignment in a synergistic manner. The scaffolds with predesigned biochemical/topographical cues demonstrated in this study might be promising for nerve tissue repair.