In population genetics, the four-gamete test is a method for detecting historical recombination events.
The presence of this conserved motif in these three different viral families is suggested to be the result of at least two separate recombination events.
These nodules are thought to correspond to mature genetic recombination events or "crossovers".
These studies showed that a P1gene product and a recombination site were both required for efficient recombination events to occur.
This recombination event happened when the temperature was around 3000 K or when the universe was approximately 379,000 years old.
The products of the recombination event depend on the relative orientation of these asymmetric sequences.
Gene order was determined by minimizing the number of recombination events required to explain the allele distribution patterns.
During this time, there can be genetic recombination events.
Fission yeast switches mating type by a replication-coupled recombination event, which takes place during S phase of the cell cycle.
These recombination events can also give rise to the deletion or inversion of intervening sequences.