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| [[Image:1911 1906.CDS-CDS.blastn.dag geneorder D20 g10 A5.1-1.w800.png|thumb|right|500px|Syntenic dotplot generated by [[SynMap]] between two strains of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis showing one inversion. [http://synteny.cnr.berkeley.edu/CoGe/OrganismView.pl?dsgid=1911 Strain IP 31758] (x-axis); [http://synteny.cnr.berkeley.edu/CoGe/OrganismView.pl?dsgid=1906 strain YPIII] (y-axis). Results can be regenerated at: http://synteny.cnr.berkeley.edu/CoGe/SynMap.pl?dsgid1=1911;dsgid2=1906;D=20;g=10;A=5;w=0;b=1;ft1=1;ft2=1;dt=geneorder]]
| | #REDIRECT: [[inversion]] |
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| ===Definition===
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| A genomic inversion is when a region of a genome or chromosome gets flipped in place. These usually happen at genomic regions with nearly identical sequence, implying a mechanism similar to non-homologous recombination.
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| ===Bacteria==
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| In bacterial genomes, inversion often occur at transposon or ribosomal gene sequences, and happen symmetrically around the [[origin of replication]]. The latter causes a characteristic pattern in syntenic dotplots called an [[x alignment]].
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