Mutations were introduced into the regulatory sequences in the long terminal repeat of an infectious molecular clone of the human immunodeficiency virus. Viruses in which the NF-kappa B binding sites were deleted or ones in which one or two Sp1 binding sites were mutated still replicated efficiently in human T lymphocytes. A deletion of the two NF-kappa B sites plus the three Sp1 sites or a mutation of the tat-responsive region rendered the virus replication incompetent. Thus, the NF-kappa B sequences are not required for human immunodeficiency virus infectivity; however, a tat-responsive region is essential.