It has not been unambiguously demonstrated whether the priming reaction of human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1) cDNA synthesis initiates with either the 2'-OH or 3'-OH group of the 3'-terminal adenosine residue of tRNA(Lys-3). In this report, we synthesized tRNA(Lys-3) of which the 3'-terminal adenosine residue lacks either a 2'-OH or 3'-OH. These tRNA molecules were used for the HIV-1 cDNA-priming reaction in a cell-free system consisting of a 141-base RNA template and purified HIV-1 reverse transcriptase. It was found that under the conditions used, the tRNA containing the 2'-deoxyadenosine was able to initiate the cDNA synthesis, while the tRNA with the 3'-deoxyadenosine was not. The results show that retroviral reverse transcriptase specifically primes cDNA synthesis from the 3'-OH group. This is in contrast to bacterial reverse transcriptase, which initiates cDNA synthesis from the 2'-OH group of an internal guanosine residue of a template RNA.