Establishing a cross-species animal model of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is crucial for the study of HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). However, due to the species-specific characteristics of HIV-1, the virus can only infect directly humans and a small number of non-human primates. It cannot directly infect mouse cells across species. A mouse leukemia cell line with high CD4 (clusters of differentiation 4)/CCR5 (CC-chemokine receptor 5)/CyclinT1 expression was constructed in this study. First, CD4/CCR5/CyclinT1 lentiviral vector was used to infect a murine leukemia cell line L1210 to express the receptor CD4, co-receptor CCR5 and tat protein driving factor CyclinT1, which are required to infect L1210 cells with HIV-1. The results of sequencing identification and fluorescence expression showed that the plasmid expressing CD4, CCR5, and CyclinT1 vector was successfully constructed and wrapped as the lentiviral vector. Moreover, it was observed that CD4, CCR5, and CyclinT1 proteins were highly expressed in mouse leukemia cells L1210 compared to empty lentiviral vector-transfected cells. Next, viral entry and replication were demonstrated when HIV-1 RNA was detected in body cells and cultured supernatants. Transgenic mice cells L1210 showed significantly greater content of HIV-1 RNA compared to control L1210 cells. Finally, CEMx174 was infected with cell culture supernatants to clarify that the progeny virus is an active virus with infection ability. HIV-1 RNA was highly expressed in CEMx174 cells. This study made the foundation for future studies evaluating HIV-1 cross-species infection in a murine animal model. The results provided new direction for studies investigating the development of vaccines, antiviral drugs screening, and HIV/AIDS pathogenesis.