Haplogroup A (mtDNA)
Haplogroup A | |
---|---|
Possible time of origin | 40,000 ± 10,000 YBP 40,500 (95% CI 37,900 <-> 43,200) ybp[1] |
Coalescence age | 18,600 (95% CI 14,200 <-> 23,900) ybp[1] 24,209 (SD 4,906) ybp[2] |
Possible place of origin | Asia |
Ancestor | N |
Descendants | A3, A4, A5, A7, A8 |
Defining mutations | 152, 235, 523-524d, 663, 1736, 4248, 4824, 8794, 16290, 16319[3] |
In human mitochondrial genetics, Haplogroup A is a human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup.
Origin[]
Haplogroup A is believed to have arisen in Asia some 30,000–50,000 years before present. Its ancestral haplogroup was Haplogroup N. However, the extant diversity of mitochondrial genomes that belong to Haplogroup A is low relative to the degree of divergence from its nearest outgroups in haplogroup N, which suggests that extant members of Haplogroup A might be descended from a population that has emerged from a bottleneck approximately 20,000 years ago.
Its highest frequencies are among Native Americans, its largest overall population is in East Asia, and its greatest variety (which suggests its origin point) is in East Asia. Thus, it might have originated in and spread from the Far East.[4]
Distribution[]
Its subclade A2 shares a T16362C mutation with subclades A1 (found in Japan, Tashkurgan, Veliky Novgorod, Mongols, and Altaians), A6 (found in Tibet and in the Yangtze River basin), A12'23 (found in Siberia and among Uralic and Turkic peoples), A13'14 (found in southern Siberia, Xinjiang, Ladakh, China, Yunnan, Thailand, and Vietnam), A15 (found in China, Naxi, Uyghur, Japan, and among the Sherpa of Tibet and Nepal), A16 (found in Uyghur, Buryat, Turkey), A17 (found in China, Miao, Yi, Tibet, Ladakh, Kyrgyz, Thailand, and Vietnam), A18 (found in China), A19 (found in China), A20 (found among Han Chinese and in Japan), A21 (found in Tibet and in Jammu and Kashmir), A22 (found in China), A24 (found in Beijing and West Bohemia), A25 (found in Japan and Yakutia), and A26 (found in Denmark). A2 is found in Chukotko–Kamchatka[5] and is also one of five mtDNA haplogroups found in the indigenous peoples of the Americas, the others being B, C, D, and X.[4]
Haplogroup A2 is the most common haplogroup among the Inuit, Na-Dene, and many Amerind ethnic groups of North and Central America. Lineages belonging to haplogroup A2 also comprise the majority of the mtDNA pool of the Inuit and their neighbors, the Chukchis, in northeasternmost Siberia.[5][6][7]
Other branches of haplogroup A are less frequent but widespread among other populations of Asia.[8][9] Haplogroup A5 is rather limited to populations from Korea and Japan southward, though it has been detected as singletons in a pair of large samples of Khamnigans (1/99 = 1.0%) and Buryats (1/295 = 0.3%) from the Buryat Republic.[6]
In Asia, A(xA2) is especially frequent in Tibeto-Burman-speaking populations of Southwest China, such as Tibetans (6/65 = 9.2%,[5] 25/216 = 11.6%,[10] 11/73 = 15.1%[10]). Approximately 7% to 15% of Koreans belong to haplogroup A.[6][11][12] Approximately 5% to 12% of the Japanese belong to haplogroup A (including A4, A5, and A(xA4, A5)).[5][13][14][15] Approximately 4% to 13% of Mongols belong to haplogroup A, almost all of whom are contained within the A4 subclade (2/47 = 4.3% Mongolians from Ulan Bator in haplogroup A4,[11] 4/48 = 8.3% Mongols from New Barag Left Banner in haplogroup A(xA5),[12] 6/47 = 12.8% Mongolians from Ulan Bator in haplogroup A4[6]). Approximately 3% to 9% of Chinese people belong to haplogroup A.[13] Haplogroup A also has been found in Vietnamese (2/42 = 4.8%, including one A4 and one A5(xA5a)).[11] Approximately 4% (3/71) of Tatars from Aznakayevo,[16] 3% (4/126) of Tatars from Buinsk,[16] and 2% of Turkish people belong to haplogroup A.[17] Haplogroup A4 has been found in 2.4% (2/82) of a sample of Persians from eastern Iran and in 2.3% (1/44) of a sample of Tajiks from Tajikistan.[6] Haplogroup A is not found among Austronesians.[18]
Table of Frequencies of MtDNA Haplogroup A[]
Population | Frequency | Count | Source | Subtypes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eskimo (Greenland) | 0.961 | 385 | Volodko 2008 | A2b=196, A2a=174 |
Eskimo (Chaplin) | 0.900 | 50 | Volodko 2008 | A2a=36, A2b=9 |
Eskimo (Canada) | 0.875 | 96 | Volodko 2008 | A2b=68, A2a=16 |
Siberian Eskimo | 0.772 | 79 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A2=61 (41/46 Chaplin, 17/25 Sireniki, 3/8 Naukan) |
Eskimo (Naukan) | 0.744 | 39 | Volodko 2008 | A2b=16, A2a=13 |
Chukchi (Anadyr, Chukotka) | 0.733 | 15 | Derenko 2007 | A2=11 |
Eskimo (Sireniki) | 0.703 | 37 | Volodko 2008 | A2a=16, A2b=10 |
Chukchi | 0.682 | 66 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A2=45 |
Bella Coola | 0.655 | 84 | Malhi 2004 | A=55 |
Apache | 0.632 | 38 | Malhi 2003 | A=24 |
Nahua (Cuetzalan, Mexico) | 0.613 | 31 | Malhi 2003 | A=19 |
Navajo | 0.516 | 64 | Malhi 2003 | A=33 |
Nuu-Chah-Nulth | 0.451 | 102 | Malhi 2004 | A=46 |
Aleut (Aleutian Islands) | 0.344 | 163 | Volodko 2008 | A2a=56 |
Nu (Gongshan, Yunnan) | 0.300 | 30 | Wen 2004 | A=9 |
Lisu (Gongshan, Yunnan) | 0.297 | 37 | Wen 2004 | A=11 |
Chuvantsi (Markovo, Chukotka) | 0.250 | 32 | Volodko 2008 | A2a=6, A2b=2 |
Tibetan (Diqing, Yunnan) | 0.250 | 24 | Wen 2004 | A=6 |
Yi (Hezhang County, Guizhou) | 0.250 | 20 | Li 2007 | A=5 |
Tibetan (Nagchu, Tibet) | 0.229 | 35 | Ji 2012 | A=8 |
Tibetan (Qinghai) | 0.214 | 56 | Wen 2004 | A=12 |
Tibetan (Shannan, Tibet) | 0.211 | 19 | Ji 2012 | A=4 |
Yi (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.188 | 16 | Wen 2004 | A=3 |
Tibetan (Chamdo, Tibet) | 0.172 | 29 | Ji 2012 | A1=5 |
Zuni | 0.154 | 26 | Malhi 2003 | A=4 |
Korean (Arun Banner) | 0.146 | 48 | Kong 2003 | A5=4, A(xA5)=3 |
Tujia (Western Hunan) | 0.141 | 64 | Wen 2004 | A=9 |
Pumi (Ninglang, Yunnan) | 0.139 | 36 | Wen 2004 | A=5 |
Tujia (Yanhe County, Guizhou) | 0.138 | 29 | Li 2007 | A=4 |
Tibetan (Lhasa, Tibet) | 0.136 | 44 | Ji 2012 | A1=6 |
Mongolian (Ulan Bator) | 0.128 | 47 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=6 |
Hani (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.121 | 33 | Wen 2004 | A=4 |
Japanese (Miyazaki) | 0.120 | 100 | Uchiyama 2007 | A4=4, A5=4, A(xA4,A5)=4 |
Gelao (Daozhen County, Guizhou) | 0.118 | 102 | Liu 2011 | A=12 |
Tibetan (Zhongdian, Yunnan) | 0.114 | 35 | Wen 2004 | A=4 |
Tubalar (Turochak & Choysky) | 0.111 | 72 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A(xA2)=8 |
Tibetan (Shannan, Tibet) | 0.109 | 55 | Ji 2012 | A1=6 |
Tibetan (Shigatse, Tibet) | 0.103 | 29 | Ji 2012 | A1=3 |
Yi (Shuangbai, Yunnan) | 0.100 | 40 | Wen 2004 | A=4 |
Manchurian | 0.100 | 40 | Jin 2009 | A(xA4,A5)=3, A4=1 |
Korean (northern China) | 0.098 | 51 | Jin 2009 | A4=4, A5(xA5a)=1 |
Yi (Luxi, Yunnan) | 0.097 | 31 | Wen 2004 | A=3 |
Han (Denver) | 0.096 | 73 | Zheng 2011 | A=7 |
Japanese | 0.090 | 211 | Maruyama 2003 | A5=11, A(xA5)=8 |
Naxi (Lijiang, Yunnan) | 0.089 | 45 | Wen 2004 | A=4 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.089 | 203 | Umetsu 2005 | A=18 |
Chinese (Shenyang, Liaoning) | 0.088 | 160 | Umetsu 2005 | A=14 |
Hmong (Jishou, Hunan) | 0.087 | 103 | Wen 2005 | A(xA6)=7, A6=2 |
Japanese (Tōhoku) | 0.086 | 336 | Umetsu 2005 | A=29 |
Mongol (New Barag Left Banner) | 0.083 | 48 | Kong 2003 | A(xA5)=4 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.081 | 185 | Jin 2009 | A4=6, A5(xA5a)=5, A(xA4,A5)=3, A5a=1 |
Ket | 0.079 | 38 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A(xA2)=3 |
Cochimí | 0.077 | 13 | Malhi 2003 | A=1 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.077 | 261 | Kim 2008 | A=20 |
Han (Beijing Normal University) | 0.074 | 121 | Zheng 2011 | A=9 |
Pai Yuman | 0.074 | 27 | Malhi 2003 | A=2 |
Tibetan (Nyingchi, Tibet) | 0.074 | 54 | Ji 2012 | A1=4 |
Han (Southwest China, pool of 44 Sichuan, 34 Chongqing, 33 Yunnan, and 26 Guizhou) | 0.073 | 137 | Ji 2012 | A=10 |
Han (Hunan and Fujian) | 0.073 | 55 | Zheng 2011 | A=4 |
Telengit | 0.073 | 55 | Dulik 2012 | A=4 |
Korean (Seoul National University Hospital) | 0.073 | 633 | Fuku 2007 | A=46 |
Buryat | 0.071 | 126 | Kong 2003 | A(xA5)=9 |
Han (southern California) | 0.069 | 390 | Ji 2012 | A=27 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.068 | 103 | Derenko 2007 | A5=4, A4(xA2)=3 |
Japanese (Tokyo) | 0.068 | 118 | Zheng 2011 | A=8 |
Okinawa | 0.067 | 326 | Umetsu 2005 | A=22 |
Japanese (northern Kyūshū) | 0.066 | 256 | Umetsu 2005 | A=17 |
Itelmen | 0.064 | 47 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A(xA2)=3 |
Japanese (Gifu) | 0.063 | 1617 | Fuku 2007 | A=102 |
Zhuang (Napo County, Guangxi) |
0.062 | 130 | Zhao 2010 | A=8 |
Barghut (Hulun Buir) | 0.060 | 149 | Derenko 2012 | A4=8, A8=1 |
Japanese (Hokkaidō) | 0.060 | 217 | Asari 2007 | A=13 |
Bai (Dali, Yunnan) | 0.059 | 68 | Wen 2004 | A=4 |
Evenk (Siberia) | 0.056 | 71 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A(xA2)=4 |
Telenghit (Altai Republic) | 0.056 | 71 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=4 |
Jino (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.056 | 18 | Wen 2004 | A=1 |
Bai (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.053 | 19 | Wen 2004 | A=1 |
Koryak | 0.052 | 155 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A2=4, A(xA2)=4 |
Buryat (Buryatia) | 0.051 | 295 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=13, A5=1, A8=1 |
Khamnigan (Buryatia) | 0.051 | 99 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=4, A5=1 |
Tibetan (Deqin, Yunnan) | 0.050 | 40 | Wen 2004 | A=2 |
Han (Beijing) | 0.050 | 40 | Jin 2009 | A4=1, A(xA4,A5)=1 |
Japanese (Tōkai) | 0.050 | 282 | Umetsu 2005 | A=14 |
Dai (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.049 | 41 | Yao 2002 | A=2 |
Vietnamese | 0.048 | 42 | Jin 2009 | A4=1, A5(xA5a)=1 |
Yakama | 0.048 | 42 | Malhi 2004 | A=2 |
Akimal O’odham | 0.047 | 43 | Malhi 2003 | A=2 |
Han (Kunming, Yunnan) | 0.047 | 43 | Yao 2002 | A=2 |
Dolgan (Anabarsky, Volochanka, , & Dudinka) | 0.045 | 154 | Fedorova 2013 | A10=3, A8=2, A4(xA4b)=2 |
Oroqen (Oroqen Autonomous Banner) | 0.045 | 44 | Kong 2003 | A(xA5)=2 |
Va (Simao, Yunnan) | 0.045 | 22 | Qian 2001 | A=1 |
Evenk (New Barag Left Banner) | 0.043 | 47 | Kong 2003 | A(xA5)=2 |
Mongolian (Ulan Bator) | 0.043 | 47 | Jin 2009 | A4=2 |
Tatar (Aznakayevo) | 0.042 | 71 | Malyarchuk 2010 | A(xA8b)=2, A8b=1 |
Altai-kizhi | 0.042 | 48 | Dulik 2012 | A=2 |
Guoshan Yao (Jianghua, Hunan) | 0.042 | 24 | Wen 2005 | A(xA6)=1 |
Evenk (Krasnoyarsk) | 0.041 | 73 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=3 |
Evenk (Ust-Maysky, Oleneksky, Zhigansky) | 0.040 | 125 | Fedorova 2013 | A4(xA4b)=3, A4b=2 |
Ainu | 0.039 | 51 | Sato 2009[19] | A=2 |
Kalmyk (Kalmykia) | 0.036 | 110 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=3, A8=1 |
Han (Taiwanese) | 0.036 | 111 | Chen 2013 | A4e1=2, A5b=2 |
Yakut (Vilyuy River basin) | 0.036 | 111 | Fedorova 2013 | A4(xA4b)=2, A4b=1, A8=1 |
Han (Taiwan) | 0.036 | 1117 | Ji 2012 | A=40 |
Dong (Tianzhu County, Guizhou) | 0.036 | 28 | Li 2007 | A=1 |
Shor | 0.036 | 28 | Dulik 2012 | A=1 |
Khakassian (Khakassia) | 0.035 | 57 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=2 |
Altay Kizhi | 0.033 | 90 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=3 |
Taiwanese (Taipei, Taiwan) | 0.033 | 91 | Umetsu 2005 | A=3 |
Wuzhou Yao (Fuchuan, Guangxi) | 0.032 | 31 | Wen 2005 | A(xA6)=1 |
Tatar (Buinsk) | 0.032 | 126 | Malyarchuk 2010 | A8b=4 |
Pan Yao (Tianlin, Guangxi) | 0.031 | 32 | Wen 2005 | A6=1 |
Kazakh (Kosh-Agach District) | 0.031 | 98 | Derenko 2012 | A4=3 |
Mansi | 0.031 | 98 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A(xA2)=3 |
Altai-kizhi (Altai Republic) | 0.029 | 276 | Dulik 2012 | A=8 |
Bapai Yao (Liannan, Guangdong) | 0.029 | 35 | Wen 2005 | A6=1 |
Guangdong | 0.026 | 546 | Peng 2011 | A=14 |
Kim Mun (Malipo, Yunnan) | 0.025 | 40 | Wen 2005 | A6=1 |
Persian (eastern Iran) | 0.024 | 82 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=2 |
Tu Yao (Hezhou, Guangxi) | 0.024 | 41 | Wen 2005 | A6=1 |
Yakut (vicinity of Yakutsk) | 0.024 | 164 | Fedorova 2013 | A4b=2, A4(xA4b)=1, A8=1 |
Lowland Yao (Fuchuan, Guangxi) | 0.024 | 42 | Wen 2005 | A(xA6)=1 |
Tajik (Tajikistan) | 0.023 | 44 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=1 |
Daur (Evenk Autonomous Banner) | 0.022 | 45 | Kong 2003 | A(xA5)=1 |
Evenk (Buryatia) | 0.022 | 45 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=1 |
Tuvan | 0.021 | 95 | Starikovskaya 2005 | A(xA2)=2 |
Aini (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.020 | 50 | Wen 2004 | A=1 |
Kumandin (Turochak District) | 0.019 | 52 | Dulik 2012 | A=1 |
Guangxi | 0.017 | 1111 | Peng 2011 | A=19 |
Yakut | 0.017 | 117 | Kong 2003 | A(xA5)=2 |
Shor (Kemerovo) | 0.012 | 82 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=1 |
Tuvinian (Tuva) | 0.010 | 105 | Derenko 2007 | A4(xA2)=1 |
Khanty | 0.009 | 106 | Pimenoff 2008 | A=1 |
Vietnam | 0.008 | 392 | Peng 2011 | A=3 |
Southeast Yunnan | 0.006 | 158 | Peng 2011 | A=1 |
Li (Hainan) | 0.003 | 346 | Peng 2011 | A=1 |
Kiliwa | 0.000 | 7 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Seri | 0.000 | 8 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Dingban Yao (Mengla, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 10 | Wen 2005 | – |
Xiban Yao (Fangcheng, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 11 | Wen 2005 | – |
Lahu (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 15 | Wen 2004 | – |
Yukaghir (Upper Kolyma) | 0.000 | 18 | Volodko 2008 | – |
Huatou Yao (Fangcheng, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 19 | Wen 2005 | – |
Filipino (Palawan) | 0.000 | 20 | Scholes 2011 | – |
Dai (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 21 | Qian 2001 | – |
Yukaghir (Verkhnekolymsky & Nizhnekolymsky) | 0.000 | 22 | Fedorova 2013 | – |
River Yuman | 0.000 | 22 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Delta Yuman | 0.000 | 23 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Hindu (Chitwan, Nepal) | 0.000 | 24 | Fornarino 2009 | – |
Nganasan | 0.000 | 24 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Tibetan (Nyingchi, Tibet) | 0.000 | 24 | Ji 2012 | – |
Buryat (Kushun, Nizhneudinsk, Irkutsk) | 0.000 | 25 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Bunu (Dahua & Tianlin, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 25 | Wen 2005 | – |
Kurd (northwestern Iran) | 0.000 | 25 | Derenko 2007 | – |
Lanten Yao (Tianlin, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 26 | Wen 2005 | – |
Iu Mien (Mengla, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 27 | Wen 2005 | – |
Andhra Pradesh (tribal) | 0.000 | 29 | Fornarino 2009 | – |
Batek (Malaysia) | 0.000 | 29 | Hill 2006 | – |
Cun (Hainan) | 0.000 | 30 | Peng 2011 | – |
Tujia (Yongshun, Hunan) | 0.000 | 30 | Wen 2004 | – |
Batak (Palawan) | 0.000 | 31 | Scholes 2011 | – |
Gelao (Daozhen County, Guizhou) | 0.000 | 31 | Li 2007 | – |
Lingao (Hainan) | 0.000 | 31 | Peng 2011 | – |
Lahu (Simao, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 32 | Wen 2004 | – |
Mendriq (Malaysia) | 0.000 | 32 | Hill 2006 | – |
Mien (Shangsi, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 32 | Wen 2005 | – |
Negidal | 0.000 | 33 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Teleut | 0.000 | 33 | Dulik 2012 | – |
Temuan (Malaysia) | 0.000 | 33 | Hill 2006 | – |
Lahu (Lancang, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 35 | Wen 2004 | – |
Aleut (Commander Islands) | 0.000 | 36 | Volodko 2008 | – |
Jemez | 0.000 | 36 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Va (Ximeng & Gengma, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 36 | Yao 2002 | – |
Yakut (Yakutia) | 0.000 | 36 | Derenko 2007 | – |
Taono O’odham | 0.000 | 37 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Hmong (Wenshan, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 39 | Wen 2005 | – |
Nganasan | 0.000 | 39 | Volodko 2008 | – |
Thai | 0.000 | 40 | Jin 2009 | – |
Tharu (Morang, Nepal) | 0.000 | 40 | Fornarino 2009 | – |
Ambon | 0.000 | 43 | Hill 2007 | – |
Lombok (Mataram) | 0.000 | 44 | Hill 2007 | – |
Alor | 0.000 | 45 | Hill 2007 | – |
Tofalar | 0.000 | 46 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Udegey | 0.000 | 46 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Hindu (New Delhi, India) | 0.000 | 48 | Fornarino 2009 | – |
Sumba (Waingapu) | 0.000 | 50 | Hill 2007 | – |
Jahai (Malaysia) | 0.000 | 51 | Hill 2006 | – |
Senoi (Malaysia) | 0.000 | 52 | Hill 2006 | – |
Teleut (Kemerovo) | 0.000 | 53 | Derenko 2007 | – |
Nivkh (northern Sakhalin) | 0.000 | 56 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Filipino | 0.000 | 61 | Hill 2007 | – |
Semelai (Malaysia) | 0.000 | 61 | Hill 2006 | – |
Mansi | 0.000 | 63 | Pimenoff 2008 | – |
Filipino | 0.000 | 64 | Tabbada 2010 | – |
Filipino (Mindanao) | 0.000 | 70 | Tabbada 2010 | – |
Tubalar (Turochak District) | 0.000 | 71 | Dulik 2012 | – |
Bali | 0.000 | 82 | Hill 2007 | – |
Yukaghir (Lower Kolyma-Indigirka) | 0.000 | 82 | Volodko 2008 | – |
Ulchi | 0.000 | 87 | Starikovskaya 2005 | – |
Chelkan (Turochak District) | 0.000 | 91 | Dulik 2012 | – |
N. Paiute/Shoshoni | 0.000 | 94 | Malhi 2003 | – |
Northern Paiute | 0.000 | 98 | Malhi 2004 | – |
Even (Eveno-Bytantaysky & Momsky) | 0.000 | 105 | Fedorova 2013 | – |
Tharu (Chitwan, Nepal) | 0.000 | 133 | Fornarino 2009 | – |
Yakut (northern Yakutia) | 0.000 | 148 | Fedorova 2013 | – |
Cham (Bình Thuận, Vietnam) | 0.000 | 168 | Peng 2010 | – |
Filipino (Luzon) | 0.000 | 177 | Tabbada 2010 | – |
Sumatra | 0.000 | 180 | Hill 2006 | – |
Sulawesi | 0.000 | 237 | Hill 2007 | – |
Taiwan aborigine | 0.000 | 640 | Peng 2011 | – |
Subclades[]
Tree[]
This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup A subclades is based on the paper by Mannis van Oven and Manfred Kayser Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation[3] and subsequent published research.
- A
- A(xA5, A8, A10) – China (Han from Wuhan), Buryat (Inner Mongolia)
- A+T152C!+T16362C – Uyghur, Korea, Japan, Vietnam (Hmong from Lao Cai Province,[20] Kinh from Hanoi,[20] Cờ Lao)
- A1 [TMRCA 12,800 (95% CI 6,500 <-> 22,700) ybp[1]]
- A1* – Japan, Korea
- A1a [TMRCA 7,500 (95% CI 4,500 <-> 11,800) ybp[1]]
- A1a* – Japan (Aichi), Sarikoli (Tashkurgan), USA, England
- A1a1 [TMRCA 5,000 (95% CI 2,200 <-> 9,800) ybp[1]]
- A1a1* – Buryat, Altai Kizhi
- A1a1a – Buryat, Mongol (Inner Mongolia) [TMRCA 1,050 (95% CI 75 <-> 5,500) ybp[1]]
- A1a2 – Russia (Bashkortostan, Velikij Novgorod), Iran (Turkmen) [TMRCA 1,950 (95% CI 100 <-> 10,500) ybp[1]]
- A1a3 – Greece (Ioannina), United States (West Virginia) [TMRCA 1,150 (95% CI 75 <-> 6,000) ybp[1]]
- A2 – Ache, Waiwai, Zoro, Surui, Waiapi, Poturujara, Kayapo, Katuena, Guarani, Arsario, Cayapa, Dogrib, ancient Canada, USA (Pennsylvania, California), Mexico (Zapotec), Cuba, Dominican Republic, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Argentina [TMRCA 10,600 (95% CI 9,600 <-> 11,700) ybp[1]]
- A2a – Eskimo (Greenland, Chukotka), Chukchi
- A2a1 – Inuit (Canada), Selkup[21]
- A2a2 – Eskimo (Chukotka), Chukchi
- A2a3 – Eskimo (Greenland, Canada, Chukotka), Chukchi
- A2a4 – USA (New Mexico, Arizona), Mexico (Chihuahua)
- A2a5 – Apache, USA (California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas), Canada (Cree, Shuswap)
- A2b – Chukchi
- A2b1 – Chukchi, Koryak, Eskimo (Chukotka, Canada, Greenland)
- A2c
- A2d – USA (Mexican, Hispanic)
- A2d1 – USA (Mexican)
- A2d1a – USA (Hispanic)
- A2d2 – USA (Hispanic)
- A2d1 – USA (Mexican)
- A2e'ao
- A2e
- A2ao
- A2ao1
- A2f
- A2f1 – Newfoundland
- A2f1a – Canada, USA (Native American)
- A2f2 – USA (Mexican, Hispanic), Mexico
- A2f3 – USA (Mexican, Hispanic)
- A2f1 – Newfoundland
- A2g – USA (Mexican, Hispanic), Mexico, Iberian Peninsula
- A2g1 – USA (Mexican, Hispanic), Latin America
- A2h – Colombia (Cocama of Amazonas, Arhuaco), Yanomama, Kogui
- A2h1 – USA (Mexican, Hispanic), Mexico, Latin America
- A2i – USA (Hispanic, etc.), Canada (Ojibwa, Prince Edward Island, Pabos in Quebec)
- A2j – USA (Hispanic)
- A2j1 – USA (Hispanic)
- A2k – USA (Hispanic)
- A2k1 – Ecuador, Wayuu, Mexico
- A2k1a – Venezuela, Colombia (Pasto of Putumayo), USA (Hispanic)
- A2k1 – Ecuador, Wayuu, Mexico
- A2l'm'n'o'ai'aj
- A2l
- A2m
- A2n – Canada
- A2o
- A2ai
- A2aj
- A2p'am
- A2q
- A2q1
- A2r – USA (Hispanic, Mexican), Cuba
- A2r1 – Mexico, USA (Mexican)
- A2s
- A2t – USA (Mexican)
- A2u
- A2u1
- A2u2
- A2v
- A2v1 – USA (Mexican, Hispanic), Mexico (La Mixteca)
- A2v1a – Guatemala, USA (Mexican)
- A2v1b – Mexico
- A2v1 – USA (Mexican, Hispanic), Mexico (La Mixteca)
- A2w – Colombia (Kogi, Guambiano of Putumayo), Arsario, USA (Mexican, Hispanic)
- A2w1 – Mexico, Cayman Islands, Guatemala (La Tinta), Panama (Guaymi), Colombia
- A2x
- A2y
- A2z – USA (Hispanic, Puerto Rico)
- A2aa
- A2ab
- A2ac
- A2ac1
- A2ad
- A2ad1
- A2ad2
- A2ae
- A2af
- A2af1
- A2af1a
- A2af1a1
- A2af1a2
- A2af1b
- A2af1b1
- A2af1b1a
- A2af1b1b
- A2af1b2
- A2af1b1
- A2af1a
- A2af2
- A2af1
- A2ag
- A2ah
- A2ak
- A2al
- A2an
- A2ap
- A2aq
- A2a – Eskimo (Greenland, Chukotka), Chukchi
- A6 [TMRCA 12,000 (95% CI 8,600 <-> 16,100) ybp[1]]
- A12'23 – Austria, Romania, Poland, Russia, possibly found among Udmurts and Komis[21]
- A12 – Czech Republic, Germany [TMRCA 11,800 (95% CI 6,500 <-> 19,700) ybp[1]]
- A12a – Ireland, UK, New Zealand, USA, Nenets,[21] Selkup[21] [TMRCA 4,700 (95% CI 2,700 <-> 7,600) ybp[1]]
- A12a* – Mansi, Yakut (Vilyuy River basin),[23] Kyrgyz (Kyrgyzstan)[24]
- A12a1 – Kyordyughen Site (Ymyiakhtakh Culture, Yakutia),[25] Hungary (Debrecen) [TMRCA 2,800 (95% CI 1,450 <-> 4,900) ybp[1]]
- A12a2 – Evenk (Krasnoyarsk Krai,[6] Stony Tunguska River basin[23]) [TMRCA 1,250 (95% CI 100 <-> 6,600) ybp[1]]
- A12b – Buryat,[6] Karos-Eperjesszög (Hungarian conqueror period)[26] [TMRCA 3,000 (95% CI 425 <-> 10,700) ybp[1]]
- A12a – Ireland, UK, New Zealand, USA, Nenets,[21] Selkup[21] [TMRCA 4,700 (95% CI 2,700 <-> 7,600) ybp[1]]
- A23 – Mongol (Inner Mongolia),[27] Buryat,[6] Ket,[21] Qashqai (Iran),[28] ancient Scythian (Chylenski) [TMRCA 6,200 (95% CI 3,300 <-> 10,600) ybp[1]]
- A12 – Czech Republic, Germany [TMRCA 11,800 (95% CI 6,500 <-> 19,700) ybp[1]]
- A13'14 – Russia (Buryat, Khamnigan), China (Shiyan, Tu, Uyghur, etc.), Ladakh, Thailand, Vietnam (Mang), Korea, Japan, Paraguay (Alto Parana[29][1]), Ireland
- A13
- A13a - Thailand (Khon Mueang from Chiang Rai Province and Lampang Province[30][1]), China[1]
- A13b
- A14 – Russia (Altai Kizhi, etc.), Kyrgyz (Artux), Uyghur, China, Han Chinese (Denver), Taiwan, Thailand (Lawa from Chiang Mai Province, Mon from Lopburi Province[30]), Vietnam (Pa Then)
- A13
- A15 – Uyghur
- A16 – Buryat, Uyghur, Turk
- A17 – China (Han from Beijing, Lanzhou,[32] etc.), Miao, Yi, Tibet (Lhoba, Monpa, Tingri), Ladakh, Kyrgyz (Tashkurgan), Thailand (Lawa from Chiang Mai Province and Mae Hong Son Province,[30] Blang from Chiang Rai Province,[30] Mon from Ratchaburi Province[30]), Vietnam (Phù Lá, Hà Nhì)
- A18 – Japan, China (Han from Fujian, Han from Beijing, Han from Lanzhou[32]), Romania
- A19 – China (Han from Beijing, etc.)
- A20 – Japan, Han Chinese (Denver)
- A21 – Tibet (Sherpa, Deng, etc.), Jammu and Kashmir
- A22 – China, Han Chinese (Denver)
- A24 – China (Han in Beijing), Turkey, Czech Republic (West Bohemia)
- A25 – Japan (Chiba), China, Yakut (Vilyuy River basin)
- A26 – Denmark
- A1 [TMRCA 12,800 (95% CI 6,500 <-> 22,700) ybp[1]]
- A3 – Japan (Tokyo, etc.), Korea [TMRCA 6,800 (95% CI 3,200 <-> 12,600) ybp[1]]
- A3a – Japan (Aichi, etc.) [TMRCA 4,300 (95% CI 1,400 <-> 9,800) ybp[1]]
- A7 [TMRCA 8,800 (95% CI 5,400 <-> 13,500) ybp[1]]
- A9
- A11 – Nepal, Russia [TMRCA 14,500 (95% CI 9,700 <-> 20,800) ybp[1]]
- A+T152C!+T16362C – Uyghur, Korea, Japan, Vietnam (Hmong from Lao Cai Province,[20] Kinh from Hanoi,[20] Cờ Lao)
- A5 – China (incl. Hong Kong), Japan [TMRCA 16,200 (95% CI 11,100 <-> 22,800) ybp]
- A5a – Japan (Tokyo, Aichi, etc.), Korea, China [TMRCA 5,500 (95% CI 3,800 <-> 7,600) ybp[1]]
- A5a1 - Korea
- A5a1a – Japan (Tokyo, etc.), Korea
- A5a1a1 – Japan (Tokyo, Chiba, Aichi, etc.), Korea[33]
- A5a1a1a – Japan (Tokyo, etc.)
- A5a1a1b – Japan (Tokyo, Chiba, etc.), Korea
- A5a1a2 – Japan, Korea
- A5a1a2a – Japan (Aichi)
- A5a1a1 – Japan (Tokyo, Chiba, Aichi, etc.), Korea[33]
- A5a1b – Japan (Tokyo, Aichi)
- A5a1a – Japan (Tokyo, etc.), Korea
- A5a2 – Japan (Tokyo, Aichi, etc.)
- A5a3
- A5a3* – Korea, USA (African American)
- A5a3a
- A5a3a* – Japan (Tokyo)
- A5a3a1 – Japan (Tokyo, Aichi, etc.)
- A5a4 – Japan
- A5a5 – Japan, South Korea (Seoul), Uyghur
- A5a1 - Korea
- A5b – China (Tujia, Hui, etc.) [TMRCA 12,800 ybp (95% CI 8,400 <-> 18,800) ybp[1]]
- A5b1 – China (Han from Beijing, etc.), Japan, Korea, Uyghur, Thailand, Vietnam (Tay), Singapore [TMRCA 8,600 (95% CI 6,600 <-> 11,100) ybp[1]]
- A5b1* – Uyghur
- A5b1a – Japan (Tokyo, etc.) [TMRCA 6,700 (95% CI 3,700 <-> 11,300) ybp[1]]
- A5b1b – China (Han from Fujian, Miao, etc.), Uyghur [TMRCA 7,300 (95% CI 5,600 <-> 9,400) ybp[1]]
- A5b1b* – Han Chinese
- A5b1b1
- A5b1b1* – Miao
- A5b1b1a – China
- A5b1b1b – China
- A5b1b2 – Uyghur
- A5b1c – Han Chinese (Denver) [TMRCA 7,600 (95% CI 3,100 <-> 15,500) ybp[1]]
- A5b1c1 – Taiwan (Hakka, Bunun, Paiwan) [TMRCA 5,400 (95% CI 1,800 <-> 12,600) ybp[1]]
- A5b1d [TMRCA 7,300 (95% CI 3,700 <-> 13,000) ybp[1]]
- A5b1d* – China
- A5b1d1 – Siamese (Central Thailand), Tay (Vietnam)
- A5b2 – China (Tujia, etc.)
- A5b1 – China (Han from Beijing, etc.), Japan, Korea, Uyghur, Thailand, Vietnam (Tay), Singapore [TMRCA 8,600 (95% CI 6,600 <-> 11,100) ybp[1]]
- A5c – Japan (Aichi, etc.), Korea,[34] Khamnigan, Buryat [TMRCA 6,100 (95% CI 2,700 <-> 11,800) ybp[1]]
- A5c1 – Japan (Tokyo, Chiba, Aichi, etc.)
- A5a – Japan (Tokyo, Aichi, etc.), Korea, China [TMRCA 5,500 (95% CI 3,800 <-> 7,600) ybp[1]]
- A8 – Uyghur [TMRCA 14,000 (95% CI 9,500 <-> 19,800) ybp[1]]
- A10 – China (Uyghur), Afghanistan (Hazara, Uzbek), Russia (Mansi, Volga Tatars, etc.), France, Canada, New York, Chumash Indians California [TMRCA 9,200 (95% CI 4,900 <-> 15,600) ybp[1]]
- A(xA5, A8, A10) – China (Han from Wuhan), Buryat (Inner Mongolia)
Popular culture[]
The mummy "Juanita" of Peru, also called the "Ice Maiden", has been shown to belong to mitochondrial haplogroup A.[35][36]
In his popular book The Seven Daughters of Eve, Bryan Sykes named the originator of this mtDNA haplogroup Aiyana.
Eva Longoria, an American actress of Mexican descent, belongs to Haplogroup A2.
See also[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haplogroup A (mtDNA). |
- Genealogical DNA test
- Genetic genealogy
- Human mitochondrial genetics
- Population genetics
- Indigenous Amerindian genetics
Phylogenetic tree of human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mitochondrial Eve (L) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L0 | L1–6 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L1 | L2 | L3 | L4 | L5 | L6 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
M | N | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CZ | D | E | G | Q | O | A | S | R | I | W | X | Y | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
C | Z | B | F | R0 | pre-JT | P | U | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
HV | JT | K | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
H | V | J | T |
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External links[]
- General
- Ian Logan's Mitochondrial DNA Site
- Mannis van Oven's Phylotree
- Haplogroup A
- Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders (PLoS)
- Spread of Haplogroup A, from National Geographic
- Aiyana
- A10 Ancient DNA – Ancient Chumash Paleoasiatic remains. A10 haplogroup assignment. www.pcas.org/assets/docu Results of Mitochondrial DNA Analyses from Monterey County, California
- A10 (( A10 ancient America sample.......Chumash documented origin, Cayegues (Kayiwish) Coastal Paleoasiatic California Indian populations, John R. Johnson, Anthropology 131CA http://www.anth.ucsb.edu/classes/anth131ca/California%20Genetic%20Prehistory.pdf
- Human mtDNA haplogroups