Schematic drawing of the HIV provirus and the four constructs used to make a lentivirus vector of the third generation. The viral LTRs, the reading frames of the viral genes, the major 5′ splice donor site (SD), the packaging sequence (Ψ), and the RRE are boxed and indicated in bold type. The conditional packaging construct, pMDLg/pRRE, expresses the gag and pol genes from the CMV promoter and intervening sequences and polyadenylation site of the human β-globin gene. As the transcripts of the gag and pol genes contain cis-repressive sequences, they are expressed only if Rev promotes their nuclear export by binding to the RRE. All tat and rev exons have been deleted, and the viral sequences upstream of the gag gene have been replaced. A nonoverlapping construct, RSV-Rev, expresses the rev cDNA. The transfer construct, pRRL.SIN-18, contains HIV-1 cis-acting sequences and an expression cassette for the transgene. It is the only portion transferred to the target cells and does not contain wild-type copies of the HIV LTR. The 5′ LTR is chimeric, with the enhancer/promoter of RSV replacing the U3 region (RRL) to rescue the transcriptional dependence on Tat. The 3′ LTR has an almost complete deletion of the U3 region, which includes the TATA box (from nucleotides −418 to −18 relative to the U3/R border). As the latter is the template used to generate both copies of the LTR in the integrated provirus, transduction of this vector results in transcriptional inactivation of both LTRs; thus, it is a self-inactivating vector (SIN-18). The fourth construct, pMD.G, encodes a heterologous envelope to pseudotype the vector, here shown coding for VSV G. Only the relevant parts of the constructs are shown.