SummaryGenes borne on cassettes are mobile owing to sitespecific recombination systems called integrons, which have created various combinations of antibiotic resistance genes in R-plasmids. In these processes, the palindromic site, attC (59-base element), at cassette junctions has been proposed as being essential. Excised and circularized cassettes have been found to integrate with preference for an attI site at one end of the conserved sequence in integrons. In this work, we give evidence that recombination is possible in the absence of the highly organized attC sites between the more simply organized attI sites. Furthermore, at a very low frequency representing the background in our recombination assay, we observed cross-overs between attI and secondary sites. To characterize recombination excluding the attC sites, we have used naturally occurring attI variants and constructed mutants. The cross-over point was identified between a guanine and a thymine in attI using point mutations. Progressive deletions showed the extent of attI and identified two important regions in the conserved sequence 5Ј of the cross-over point. A region 27-36 bp 5Ј of attI influenced recombination with attC sites only, whereas a sequence 9-14 bp 5Ј of the cross-over point in attI was important for recombination with both attI and attC. Recombination between attI and secondary sites could allow fusion of the conserved sequence encoding the integron site-specific recombinase to new sequences.