Accumulation of amino acid (AA) insertions/substitutions are observed in the Gag-protein of HIV-1 variants resistant to HIV-1 protease inhibitors. Here, we found that HIV-1 carrying AA insertions in capsid protein (CA) undergoes aberrant CA degradation. When we generated recombinant HIV-1s (rHIV-1s) containing 19-AAs in Gag, such insertions caused significant CA degradation, which initiated in CA's C-terminal. Such rHIV-1s had remarkable morphological abnormality, decreased infectivity, and no replicative ability, which correlated with levels of CA degradation. The CA degradation observed was energy-independent and had no association with cellular/viral proteolytic mechanisms, suggesting that the CA degradation occurs due to conformational/structural incompatibility caused by the 19-AA insertions. The incorporation of degradation-prone CA into the wild-type CA resulted in significant disruption of replication competence in "chimeric" virions. The data should allow better understanding of the dynamics and mechanisms of CA decomposition/degradation and retroviral uncoating, which may lead to new approach for antiretroviral modalities.