Proviral DNAs from 3 laboratory strains and 21 clinical isolates of HIV-1 were extracted from infected cells after proteinase K digestion and the protease gene was PCR amplified and sequenced directly by the Sanger method. In vitro susceptibilities of the virus isolates to protease inhibitors were determined by the ACTG/DoD consensus assay. Four different HIV protease inhibitors were tested including P9941, a C2 symmetrical diol (Du Pont-Merck); A80987, an asymmetric mono-ol (Abbott); XM323, a cyclic urea (Du Pont-Merck); and Ro31-8959, an asymmetric hydroxyethylene isostere (Roche). Maximum sequence variation was 10% at both the nucleic and amino acid levels. Purine-purine substitutions were most common. Five noncontiguous regions were conserved across all isolates and corresponded to amino acids 1-9 (amino terminal), 21-32 (catalytic site), 47-56 ("flap" region), 78-88 (substrate-binding region), and 94-99 (carboxy terminal). All clinical isolates demonstrated in vitro susceptibility to the protease inhibitors. There was no significant difference between the susceptibility of the reference strains and the clinical isolates. These data suggest that the variable regions of protease do not contain sites that are important for interactions with the inhibitors tested.