Replicative transposition is a mechanism of transposition in molecular biology, proposed by James A. Shapiro in 1979,[1] in which the transposable element is duplicated during the reaction, so that the transposing entity is a copy of the original element.
In this mechanism, the donor and receptor DNA sequences form a characteristic intermediate "theta" configuration, sometimes called a "Shapiro intermediate".
[2] Replicative transposition is characteristic to retrotransposons and occurs from time to time in class II transposons.
[3]