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non-replicative transposition, DNA-mediated

Known as: cut-and-paste transposition 
Process by which a transposable element is excised from the donor site and integrated at the target site without replication of the element. Also… 
National Institutes of Health

Papers overview

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2019
2019
Transposons have had a pivotal role in genome evolution1 and are believed to be the evolutionary progenitors of the RAG1–RAG2… 
Review
2015
Review
2015
P transposable elements were discovered in Drosophila as the causative agents of a syndrome of genetic traits called hybrid… 
Review
2013
Review
2013
Eukaryotic organisms have dynamic genomes, with transposable elements (TEs) as a major contributing factor. Although the large… 
Highly Cited
2011
Highly Cited
2011
The P transposable element recently invaded wild Drosophila melanogaster strains worldwide. A single introduced copy can multiply… 
Review
2010
Review
2010
Gene therapy applications require efficient tools for the stable delivery of genetic information into eukaryotic genomes. Most… 
2006
2006
The Rag proteins carry out V(D)J recombination through a process mechanistically similar to cut-and-paste transposition… 
Review
2004
Review
2004
Members of the Tc1/mariner superfamily of transposable elements isolated from vertebrate species are inactive due to the… 
Highly Cited
2000
Highly Cited
2000
The Hermes transposable element is derived from the house fly, Musca domestica, and can incorporate into the germline of the… 
2000
2000
Tol2 is a terminal-inverted-repeat transposable element of the medaka fish Oryzias latipes. It is a member of the hAT (hobo… 
Highly Cited
1998
Highly Cited
1998
Mariner transposons belong to the mariner /Tc1 superfamily of class II, DNA-mediated elements. One of these transposons, Himar1…