As a common feature to retroviruses, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) packages two identical copies of its single stranded RNA genome (gRNA) that hold together at its 5’-end. gRNA dimerization is initiated by stem loop 1 (SL1), which consists of a highly conserved asymmetric internal loop and a GC-rich self-interacting palindromic apical loop that can drive dimerization by forming a meta-stable kissing dimer. During maturation, the kissing dimer undergoes a transition catalyzed by the viral nucleocapsid protein (NCp) into a thermodynamically more stable duplex. Both dimerization and structural isomerization between the kissing and duplex dimer are critical for viral replication and packaging. While SL1 and NCp have been the focus of many ...