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Haplogroup L2

Haplogroup L2 is a human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup with a widespread modern distribution, particularly in Subequatorial Africa. Its L2a subclade is a somewhat frequent and widely distributed mtDNA cluster on the continent, as well as among those in the Americas.

Haplogroup L2
Possible time of origin80,000–111,100 YBP[1]
Possible place of originWest Africa[2] or Central Africa
AncestorL2─6 (L2'3'4'6)
DescendantsL2a─d, L2e
Defining mutations146, 150, 152, 2416, 8206, 9221, 10115, 13590, 16311!, 16390[3]

Origin edit

L2 is a common lineage in Africa. It is believed to have evolved between 87,000 and 107,000 years ago[4] or approx. 90,000 YBP.[1] Its age and widespread distribution and diversity across the continent makes its exact origin point within Africa difficult to trace with any confidence.[5] Several L2 haplotypes observed in Guineans and other West Africa populations shared genetic matches with East Africa and North Africa.[6] An origin for L2b, L2c, L2d and L2e in West or Central Africa seems likely.[5] The early diversity of L2 can be observed all over the African Continent, but as we can see in Subclades section below, the highest diversity is found in West Africa. Most of subclades are largely confined to West and western-Central Africa.[7]

According to a 2015 study, "results show that lineages in Southern Africa cluster with Western/Central African lineages at a recent time scale, whereas, eastern lineages seem to be substantially more ancient. Three moments of expansion from a Central African source are associated to L2: one migration at 70–50 ka into Eastern or Southern Africa, postglacial movements 15–10 ka into Eastern Africa; and the southward Bantu Expansion in the last 5 ka. The complementary population and L0a phylogeography analyses indicate no strong evidence of mtDNA gene flow between eastern and southern populations during the later movement, suggesting low admixture between Eastern African populations and the Bantu migrants. This implies that, at least in the early stages, the Bantu expansion was mainly a demic diffusion with little incorporation of local populations".[8]

Distribution edit

 
Projected spatial distribution of haplogroup L2 in Africa.

L2 is the most common haplogroup in Africa, and it has been observed throughout the continent. It is found in approximately one third of Africans and their recent descendants.

The highest frequency occurs among the Mbuti Pygmies (64%).[9] Also strong presence in Western Africa populations in Senegal (43-54%).[6] Also important in Non-Bantu populations of East Africa (44%),[10] in Sudan and Mozambique.

It is particularly abundant in Chad and the Kanembou (38% of the sample), but is also relatively frequent in Nomadic Arabs (33%)[11][5] and Akan people (~33%)[12]

Subclades edit

Haplogroup L2 family tree
Haplogroup L2 
 
 

 L2a

 

 L2b

 L2c

 L2d

 L2e

L2 has five main subhaplogroups: L2a, L2b, L2c, L2d and L2e. Of these lineages, the most common subclade is L2a, which is found in Africa the Levant and in the Americas.[13]

Haplogroup L2 has been observed among specimens at the island cemetery in Kulubnarti, Sudan, which date from the Early Christian period (AD 550–800).[14]

Haplogroup L2a edit

L2a is widespread in Africa and the most common and widely distributed sub-Saharan African Haplogroup and is also somewhat frequent at 19% in the Americas among descendants of the continent of AfroEurAsia using the Out of Africa Theory or Model. (Salas et al., 2002). L2a has a possible date of origin approx. 48,000 YBP.[1]

It is particularly abundant in Chad (38% of the sample; 33% undifferentiated L2 among Chad Arabs,[15]), and in Non-Bantu populations of East Africa (Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania) at 38%.[10] About 33% in Mozambique[16] and 32% in Ghana.[12]

This subclade is characterised by mutations at 2789, 7175, 7274, 7771, 11914, 13803, 14566 and 16294. It represents 52% of the total L2 and is the only subclade of L2 to be widespread all over Africa.[17]

The wide distribution of L2a and diversity makes identifying a geographical origin difficult. The main puzzle is the almost ubiquitous Haplogroup L2a, which may have spread East and West along the South East Africa Corridor in after the Last Glacial Maximum, or the origins of these expansions may lie earlier, at the beginnings of the Later Stone Age ~ 40,000 years ago.[5][17]

In East Africa L2a was found 15% in Nile ValleyNubia, 5% of Egyptians, 14% of Cushite speakers, 15% of Semitic Amhara people, 10% of Gurage, 6% of Tigray-Tigrinya people, 13% of Ethiopians and 5% of Yemenis.[16]

Haplogroup L2a also appears in North Africa, with the highest frequency 20% Tuareg, Fulani (14%). Found also among some Algeria Arabs, it is found at 10% among Moroccan Arabs, some Moroccan Berbers and Tunisian Berbers.[18][19]

In patients who are given the drug stavudine to treat HIV, Haplogroup L2a is associated with a lower likelihood of peripheral neuropathy as a side effect.[20]

Haplogroup L2a1 edit

L2a can be further divided into L2a1, harboring the transition at 16309 (Salas et al. 2002).[21]

This subclade is observed at varying frequencies in West Africa among the Malinke, Wolof, and others; among the North Africans; in the Sahel among the Hausa, Fulbe, and others; in Central Africa among the Bamileke, Tikar, Fali, and others; in South Africa among the Khoisan family including the Khwe and Bantu speakers; and in East Africa among the Kikuyu from Kenya.[21]

All L2 clades present in Ethiopia are mainly derived from the two subclades, L2a1 and L2b. L2a1 is defined by mutations at 12693, 15784 and 16309. Most Ethiopian L2a1 sequences share mutations at nps 16189 and 16309. However, whereas the majority (26 out of 33) Afro Americans share Haplogroup L2a complete sequences could be partitioned into four subclades by substitutions at nps L2a1e-3495, L2a1a-3918, L2a1f-5581, and L2a1i-15229. None of those sequences, were observed in Ethiopian 16309 L2a1 samples. (Salas 2002) et al.[21]

Haplogroup L2a1 has also been observed among the Mahra (4.6%).[22]

Haplogroup L2a1 has been found in ancient fossils associated with the Pre-Pottery Neolithic culture at Tell Halula, Syria.[23] A specimen excavated at the Savanna Pastoral Neolithic site of Luxmanda in Tanzania also carried the L2a1 clade. Admixture clustering analysis further indicated that the individual bore significant ancestry from the ancient Levant, confirming ancestral ties between the makers of the Savanna Pastoral Neolithic and the Pre-Pottery Neolithic.[24]

Haplogroup L2a1a edit

Subclade L2a1a is defined by substitutions at 3918, 5285, 15244, and 15629. There are two L2a clusters that are well represented in southeastern Africans, L2a1a and L2a1b, both defined by transitions at quite stable HVS-I positions. Both of these appear to have an origin in West Africa or North West Africa (as indicated by the distribution of matching or neighboring types), and to have undergone dramatic expansion either in South East Africa or in a population ancestral to present-day Southeastern Africans.

The very recent starbursts in subclades L2a1a and L2a2 suggest a signature for the Bantu expansions, as also proposed by Pereira et al. (2001).

L2a1a is defined by a mutation at 16286. The L2a1a founder candidate dates to 2,700 (SE 1,200) years ago. (Pereira et al. 2001). However, L2a1a, as defined by a substitution at (np 16286) (Salas et al. 2002), is now supported by a coding-region marker (np 3918) (fig. 2A) and was found in four of six Yemeni L2a1 lineages. L2a1a occurs at its highest frequency in Southeastern Africa (Pereira et al. 2001; Salas et al. 2002). Both the frequent founder haplotype and derived lineages (with 16092 mutation) found among Yemenis have exact matches within Mozambique sequences (Pereira et al. 2001; Salas et al. 2002). L2a1a also occurs at a smaller frequency in North West Africa, among the Maure and Bambara of Mali and Mauritania.[25] (Rando et al. 1998; Maca-Meyer et al. 2003)

L2a1a is present in the United States population.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1a1 edit

L2a1a1 is defined by markers 6152C, 15391T, and 16368C. It has been found in the United States[13] as well as Brazil,[26] Libya, Sierra Leone, Angola,[27] Zambia,[28] and other countries.

Haplogroup L2a1b edit

L2a1b is defined by substitutions at 16189 and 10143. 16192 is also common in L2a1b and L2a1c; it appears in North Africa in Egypt, It also appears in Southeastern Africa and so it may also be a marker for the Bantu expansion.[5] the South African variant is mostly attributed to L2a1b1 being a branch of the L2a1b, it is found in South Africa, Mozambique, Kenya, and Kuwait.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1c edit

L2a1c often shares mutation 16189 with L2a1b, but has its own markers at 3010 and 6663. 16192 is also common in L2a1b and L2a1c; it appears in Southeastern Africa as well as East Africa.[29] This suggests some diversification of this clade in situ.

Positions T16209C C16301T C16354T on top of L2a1 define a small sub-clade, dubbed L2a1c by Kivisild et al. (2004, Figure 3) (see also Figure 6 in Salas et al. 2002), which mainly appears in East Africa (e.g. Sudan, Nubia, Ethiopia), among the Turkana and West Africa (e.g. Kanuri).

In the Chad Basin, four different L2a1c types one or two mutational steps from the East and West African types were identified. (Kivisild et al.) 2004.[29] (citation on page.9 or 443)[11][30]

L2a1c has been shown to be present in Chad, Gabon, Spain, and the United States.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1c1 edit

L2a1c1 has a north African origin.[30] It is defined by markers 198, 930, 3308, 8604, 16086. It is observed in Tunisians, Moroccans, Egyptians, Nubians, and Yemenis. Branches of L2a1c1 are present in Nigeria, Senegal, and Zambia.[31]

Haplogroup L2a1d edit

L2a1d is defined by the mutations T5196C, T9530C, T11386C, A12612G, and C13934T. It has been found in the United Arab Emirates[32] and Kuwait Also L2a1d is found in Benin.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1d1 edit

L2a1d1 is an Eastern African branch[8] that has been identified in populations in Somalia[33] and Sudan.[34] L2a1d1 has also been found in Ethiopia and Egypt.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1d2 edit

L2a1d2 is associated with Sub-Saharan Africa, including southern Africa (Mozambique,[35] Mbunda people and Bemba people in Zambia,[36] Khoisan peoples including Tshwa San[37]).

Haplogroup L2a1e edit

L2a1e is defined by the mutations C3495A, G8790A, and G12630A. It has been found in Brazil, Grenada, and among African Americans.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1e1 edit

L2a1e1 has been found around the Americas in Brazil.[38] It is also found in Nigeria, Caribbean populations of West African descent (Jamaica, Dominica, and Barbados), and among African Americans.

Haplogroup L2a1f edit

L2a1f is observed in Bakongo descendants living in the United States and the Dominican Republic, Khosian people in South Africa, Oman,[39] Zambia and Madagascar it has also been found in Burkina and Oman as well as through the Americas.

Haplogroup L2a1g edit

L2a1g is defined by the mutations A8014G, C14281T, T16131C, C16225T, and C16234T. It is observed in southern Africa among Bantu speakers,[2] including in Zambia, Madagascar, and South Africa.

Haplogroup L2a1h edit

L2a1h has been shown to be present in Israel and Kenya.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1k edit

L2a1k is defined by markers G6722A and T12903C. Described as European-specific, it was previously called subclade L2a1a and has been detected in Czechs, Slovaks, Croatians, Serbs, and Bulgarians.[40][41]

Haplogroup L2a1l edit

L2a1l is defined by the mutation C534T. It appears in Algeria, Sierra Leone (among Mende people), and The Gambia (among Wolof people) and was present in ancient Spain.[42]

Haplogroup L2a1l1 edit

L2a1l1 is observed among the Nuna[43] and Mossi[44] peoples of Burkina Faso.

Haplogroup L2a1l2 edit

L2a1l2 is present in people in various parts of West Africa, North Africa, and western Europe, including Mandinka people from Guinea-Bissau, Fula people from The Gambia, and Pana people from Burkina Faso.[42]

Haplogroup L2a1l2a edit

L2a1l2a is recognized as an "Ashkenazi-specific" haplogroup, seen amongst Ashkenazi Jews with ancestry in Central and Eastern Europe. It has also been detected in small numbers in ostensibly non-Jewish Polish populations, where it is presumed to have come from Ashkenazi admixture.[45] However, this haplotype constitutes only a very small proportion of Ashkenazi mitochondrial lineages; various studies (including Behar's) have put its incidence at between 1.4–1.6%.

Haplogroup L2a1l3 edit

L2a1l3 is defined by the mutations G14905A and T16357C. It is found in Yoruba people in Nigeria and in Algeria.

Haplogroup L2a1m edit

L2a1m is defined by the mutation A13884G. It has been found in Burkina Faso[46] and Haiti as well as Oman, Yemen, Saudi Arabia and Israel.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1m1 edit

L2a1m1 has been found among African Americans and Dominicans.

Haplogroup L2a1m1a edit

L2a1m1a has been found among African Americans and in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.

Haplogroup L2a1n edit

L2a1n is observed among the Yoruba people of Nigeria and the Mossi people of Burkina Faso and has also been detected in Cameroon and Portugal on the Iberian Peninsula.[13]

Haplogroup L2a1o edit

L2a1o is defined by the mutation T12438C. It has been detected in Syria and Burkina Faso.[46]

Haplogroup L2a1p edit

L2a1p is defined by the mutations A9410G, T13818C, and C15626T. It is found in Nigeria, Kassena people in Burkina Faso, and Moroccan Jews. It is also present in the United States of America.[13]

Haplogroup L2a2 edit

L2a2 is characteristic of the Mbuti Pygmies.[9]

Haplogroup L2b'c edit

L2b'c probably evolved around 62,000 years ago.[1]

Haplogroup L2b edit

This subclade is predominantly found in West Africa, but it is spread all over Africa.[47] branches of L2b also include L2b1a1 which is found in Liguria Italy and L2b3 which is found in Galicia (Spain).[13]

Haplogroup L2c edit

L2c is most frequent in West Africa, and may have arisen there.[17] Specially present in Senegal at 39%, Cape Verde 16% and Guinea-Bissau 16%.[6] Branches of L2c has also been known to be found in Europe in areas such as on the Iberian Peninsula in Andalusia Spain, Catalonia Spain and also in continental North Western Europe in the Netherlands.[13]

Haplogroup L2d edit

L2d is most frequent in West Africa, where it may have arisen.[17] It is also found in Yemen, Mozambique and Sudan.[16]

Haplogroup L2e edit

L2e (former L2d2) is typical in West Africa.[5] It is also found in Tunisia,[48] and among Mandinka people from Guinea-Bissau and African Americans.[47]

Tree edit

 
Phylogenetic tree of haplogroup L2 subclades. Numbers in the left side bar represents estimated time in thousand years ago. Colour scheme corresponding to the probable origin of each clade.

This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup L2 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.

  • Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA)
    • L1'2'3'4'5'6
      • L2'3'4'6
        • L2
          • L2a'b'c'd
            • L2a
              • L2a1
                • L2a1a
                  • L2a1a1
                  • L2a1a2
                    • L2a1a2a
                      • L2a1a2a1
                    • L2a1a2b
                  • L2a1a3
                • 16189 (16192)
                  • L2a1b
                    • L2a1b1
                  • L2a1f
                    • L2a1f1
                • 143
                  • L2a1c
                    • L2a1c1
                    • L2a1c2
                    • L2a1c3
                    • L2a1c4
                  • L2a1d
                  • L2a1e
                    • L2a1e1
                  • L2a1h
                  • 16189
                    • L2a1i
                    • L2a1j
                    • L2a1k
                    • 16192
                      • L2a1l
                        • L2a1l1
                          • L2a1l1a
                        • L2a1l2
              • L2a2
                • L2a2a
                  • L2a2a1
                • L2a2b
                  • L2a2b1
            • L2b'c
              • L2b
                • L2b1
                  • L2b1a
                    • L2b1a2
                    • L2b1a3
              • L2c
                • L2c2
                  • L2c2a
                • L2c3
            • L2d
              • L2d1
                • L2d1a
          • L2e

See also edit

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

References edit

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  46. ^ a b Supplementary Table 3 in "60,000 years of interactions between Central and Eastern Africa documented by major African mitochondrial haplogroup L2" by Marina Silva, Farida Alshamali, et al., 2015
  47. ^ a b Behar et al 2008b, The Dawn of Human Matrilineal Diversity Am J Hum Genet. 2008 May 9; 82(5): 1130–1140
  48. ^ Costa, Marta D., et al. (April 2009), Data from complete mtDNA sequencing of Tunisian centenarians: testing haplogroup association and the "golden mean" to longevity. () Mechanisms of Ageing and Development. 130(4): 222-226, PMID 19133286, doi:10.1016/j.mad.2008.12.001

External links edit

  • Ian Logan's Haplogroup L2. Mitochondrial DNA Site
  • Ian Logan's L2bcd. Mitochondrial DNA Site
  • Mannis van Oven's
  • , from National Geographic
  • Cerezo M, Achilli A, Olivieri A, Perego UA, Gómez-Carballa A, BrisighelliF, Lancioni H, López-Soto M, Carracedo Á, Capelli C, Torroni A, Salas A [2] Reconstructing Ancient MtDna Research Site

haplogroup, human, mitochondrial, mtdna, haplogroup, with, widespread, modern, distribution, particularly, subequatorial, africa, subclade, somewhat, frequent, widely, distributed, mtdna, cluster, continent, well, among, those, americas, possible, time, origin. Haplogroup L2 is a human mitochondrial DNA mtDNA haplogroup with a widespread modern distribution particularly in Subequatorial Africa Its L2a subclade is a somewhat frequent and widely distributed mtDNA cluster on the continent as well as among those in the Americas Haplogroup L2Possible time of origin80 000 111 100 YBP 1 Possible place of originWest Africa 2 or Central AfricaAncestorL2 6 L2 3 4 6 DescendantsL2a d L2eDefining mutations146 150 152 2416 8206 9221 10115 13590 16311 16390 3 Contents 1 Origin 2 Distribution 3 Subclades 3 1 Haplogroup L2a 3 1 1 Haplogroup L2a1 3 1 1 1 Haplogroup L2a1a 3 1 1 1 1 Haplogroup L2a1a1 3 1 1 2 Haplogroup L2a1b 3 1 1 3 Haplogroup L2a1c 3 1 1 3 1 Haplogroup L2a1c1 3 1 1 4 Haplogroup L2a1d 3 1 1 4 1 Haplogroup L2a1d1 3 1 1 4 2 Haplogroup L2a1d2 3 1 1 5 Haplogroup L2a1e 3 1 1 5 1 Haplogroup L2a1e1 3 1 1 6 Haplogroup L2a1f 3 1 1 7 Haplogroup L2a1g 3 1 1 8 Haplogroup L2a1h 3 1 1 9 Haplogroup L2a1k 3 1 1 10 Haplogroup L2a1l 3 1 1 10 1 Haplogroup L2a1l1 3 1 1 10 2 Haplogroup L2a1l2 3 1 1 10 3 Haplogroup L2a1l2a 3 1 1 10 4 Haplogroup L2a1l3 3 1 1 11 Haplogroup L2a1m 3 1 1 11 1 Haplogroup L2a1m1 3 1 1 11 2 Haplogroup L2a1m1a 3 1 1 12 Haplogroup L2a1n 3 1 1 13 Haplogroup L2a1o 3 1 1 14 Haplogroup L2a1p 3 1 2 Haplogroup L2a2 3 2 Haplogroup L2b c 3 2 1 Haplogroup L2b 3 2 2 Haplogroup L2c 3 3 Haplogroup L2d 3 4 Haplogroup L2e 4 Tree 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksOrigin editL2 is a common lineage in Africa It is believed to have evolved between 87 000 and 107 000 years ago 4 or approx 90 000 YBP 1 Its age and widespread distribution and diversity across the continent makes its exact origin point within Africa difficult to trace with any confidence 5 Several L2 haplotypes observed in Guineans and other West Africa populations shared genetic matches with East Africa and North Africa 6 An origin for L2b L2c L2d and L2e in West or Central Africa seems likely 5 The early diversity of L2 can be observed all over the African Continent but as we can see in Subclades section below the highest diversity is found in West Africa Most of subclades are largely confined to West and western Central Africa 7 According to a 2015 study results show that lineages in Southern Africa cluster with Western Central African lineages at a recent time scale whereas eastern lineages seem to be substantially more ancient Three moments of expansion from a Central African source are associated to L2 one migration at 70 50 ka into Eastern or Southern Africa postglacial movements 15 10 ka into Eastern Africa and the southward Bantu Expansion in the last 5 ka The complementary population and L0a phylogeography analyses indicate no strong evidence of mtDNA gene flow between eastern and southern populations during the later movement suggesting low admixture between Eastern African populations and the Bantu migrants This implies that at least in the early stages the Bantu expansion was mainly a demic diffusion with little incorporation of local populations 8 Distribution edit nbsp Projected spatial distribution of haplogroup L2 in Africa L2 is the most common haplogroup in Africa and it has been observed throughout the continent It is found in approximately one third of Africans and their recent descendants The highest frequency occurs among the Mbuti Pygmies 64 9 Also strong presence in Western Africa populations in Senegal 43 54 6 Also important in Non Bantu populations of East Africa 44 10 in Sudan and Mozambique It is particularly abundant in Chad and the Kanembou 38 of the sample but is also relatively frequent in Nomadic Arabs 33 11 5 and Akan people 33 12 Subclades editHaplogroup L2 family treeHaplogroup L2 L2a L2b L2c L2d L2eL2 has five main subhaplogroups L2a L2b L2c L2d and L2e Of these lineages the most common subclade is L2a which is found in Africa the Levant and in the Americas 13 Haplogroup L2 has been observed among specimens at the island cemetery in Kulubnarti Sudan which date from the Early Christian period AD 550 800 14 Haplogroup L2a edit L2a is widespread in Africa and the most common and widely distributed sub Saharan African Haplogroup and is also somewhat frequent at 19 in the Americas among descendants of the continent of AfroEurAsia using the Out of Africa Theory or Model Salas et al 2002 L2a has a possible date of origin approx 48 000 YBP 1 It is particularly abundant in Chad 38 of the sample 33 undifferentiated L2 among Chad Arabs 15 and in Non Bantu populations of East Africa Kenya Uganda and Tanzania at 38 10 About 33 in Mozambique 16 and 32 in Ghana 12 This subclade is characterised by mutations at 2789 7175 7274 7771 11914 13803 14566 and 16294 It represents 52 of the total L2 and is the only subclade of L2 to be widespread all over Africa 17 The wide distribution of L2a and diversity makes identifying a geographical origin difficult The main puzzle is the almost ubiquitous Haplogroup L2a which may have spread East and West along the South East Africa Corridor in after the Last Glacial Maximum or the origins of these expansions may lie earlier at the beginnings of the Later Stone Age 40 000 years ago 5 17 In East Africa L2a was found 15 in Nile Valley Nubia 5 of Egyptians 14 of Cushite speakers 15 of Semitic Amhara people 10 of Gurage 6 of Tigray Tigrinya people 13 of Ethiopians and 5 of Yemenis 16 Haplogroup L2a also appears in North Africa with the highest frequency 20 Tuareg Fulani 14 Found also among some Algeria Arabs it is found at 10 among Moroccan Arabs some Moroccan Berbers and Tunisian Berbers 18 19 In patients who are given the drug stavudine to treat HIV Haplogroup L2a is associated with a lower likelihood of peripheral neuropathy as a side effect 20 Haplogroup L2a1 edit L2a can be further divided into L2a1 harboring the transition at 16309 Salas et al 2002 21 This subclade is observed at varying frequencies in West Africa among the Malinke Wolof and others among the North Africans in the Sahel among the Hausa Fulbe and others in Central Africa among the Bamileke Tikar Fali and others in South Africa among the Khoisan family including the Khwe and Bantu speakers and in East Africa among the Kikuyu from Kenya 21 All L2 clades present in Ethiopia are mainly derived from the two subclades L2a1 and L2b L2a1 is defined by mutations at 12693 15784 and 16309 Most Ethiopian L2a1 sequences share mutations at nps 16189 and 16309 However whereas the majority 26 out of 33 Afro Americans share Haplogroup L2a complete sequences could be partitioned into four subclades by substitutions at nps L2a1e 3495 L2a1a 3918 L2a1f 5581 and L2a1i 15229 None of those sequences were observed in Ethiopian 16309 L2a1 samples Salas 2002 et al 21 Haplogroup L2a1 has also been observed among the Mahra 4 6 22 Haplogroup L2a1 has been found in ancient fossils associated with the Pre Pottery Neolithic culture at Tell Halula Syria 23 A specimen excavated at the Savanna Pastoral Neolithic site of Luxmanda in Tanzania also carried the L2a1 clade Admixture clustering analysis further indicated that the individual bore significant ancestry from the ancient Levant confirming ancestral ties between the makers of the Savanna Pastoral Neolithic and the Pre Pottery Neolithic 24 Haplogroup L2a1a edit Subclade L2a1a is defined by substitutions at 3918 5285 15244 and 15629 There are two L2a clusters that are well represented in southeastern Africans L2a1a and L2a1b both defined by transitions at quite stable HVS I positions Both of these appear to have an origin in West Africa or North West Africa as indicated by the distribution of matching or neighboring types and to have undergone dramatic expansion either in South East Africa or in a population ancestral to present day Southeastern Africans The very recent starbursts in subclades L2a1a and L2a2 suggest a signature for the Bantu expansions as also proposed by Pereira et al 2001 L2a1a is defined by a mutation at 16286 The L2a1a founder candidate dates to 2 700 SE 1 200 years ago Pereira et al 2001 However L2a1a as defined by a substitution at np 16286 Salas et al 2002 is now supported by a coding region marker np 3918 fig 2A and was found in four of six Yemeni L2a1 lineages L2a1a occurs at its highest frequency in Southeastern Africa Pereira et al 2001 Salas et al 2002 Both the frequent founder haplotype and derived lineages with 16092 mutation found among Yemenis have exact matches within Mozambique sequences Pereira et al 2001 Salas et al 2002 L2a1a also occurs at a smaller frequency in North West Africa among the Maure and Bambara of Mali and Mauritania 25 Rando et al 1998 Maca Meyer et al 2003 L2a1a is present in the United States population 13 Haplogroup L2a1a1 edit L2a1a1 is defined by markers 6152C 15391T and 16368C It has been found in the United States 13 as well as Brazil 26 Libya Sierra Leone Angola 27 Zambia 28 and other countries Haplogroup L2a1b edit L2a1b is defined by substitutions at 16189 and 10143 16192 is also common in L2a1b and L2a1c it appears in North Africa in Egypt It also appears in Southeastern Africa and so it may also be a marker for the Bantu expansion 5 the South African variant is mostly attributed to L2a1b1 being a branch of the L2a1b it is found in South Africa Mozambique Kenya and Kuwait 13 Haplogroup L2a1c edit L2a1c often shares mutation 16189 with L2a1b but has its own markers at 3010 and 6663 16192 is also common in L2a1b and L2a1c it appears in Southeastern Africa as well as East Africa 29 This suggests some diversification of this clade in situ Positions T16209C C16301T C16354T on top of L2a1 define a small sub clade dubbed L2a1c by Kivisild et al 2004 Figure 3 see also Figure 6 in Salas et al 2002 which mainly appears in East Africa e g Sudan Nubia Ethiopia among the Turkana and West Africa e g Kanuri In the Chad Basin four different L2a1c types one or two mutational steps from the East and West African types were identified Kivisild et al 2004 29 citation on page 9 or 443 11 30 L2a1c has been shown to be present in Chad Gabon Spain and the United States 13 Haplogroup L2a1c1 edit L2a1c1 has a north African origin 30 It is defined by markers 198 930 3308 8604 16086 It is observed in Tunisians Moroccans Egyptians Nubians and Yemenis Branches of L2a1c1 are present in Nigeria Senegal and Zambia 31 Haplogroup L2a1d edit L2a1d is defined by the mutations T5196C T9530C T11386C A12612G and C13934T It has been found in the United Arab Emirates 32 and Kuwait Also L2a1d is found in Benin 13 Haplogroup L2a1d1 edit L2a1d1 is an Eastern African branch 8 that has been identified in populations in Somalia 33 and Sudan 34 L2a1d1 has also been found in Ethiopia and Egypt 13 Haplogroup L2a1d2 edit L2a1d2 is associated with Sub Saharan Africa including southern Africa Mozambique 35 Mbunda people and Bemba people in Zambia 36 Khoisan peoples including Tshwa San 37 Haplogroup L2a1e edit L2a1e is defined by the mutations C3495A G8790A and G12630A It has been found in Brazil Grenada and among African Americans 13 Haplogroup L2a1e1 edit L2a1e1 has been found around the Americas in Brazil 38 It is also found in Nigeria Caribbean populations of West African descent Jamaica Dominica and Barbados and among African Americans Haplogroup L2a1f edit L2a1f is observed in Bakongo descendants living in the United States and the Dominican Republic Khosian people in South Africa Oman 39 Zambia and Madagascar it has also been found in Burkina and Oman as well as through the Americas Haplogroup L2a1g edit L2a1g is defined by the mutations A8014G C14281T T16131C C16225T and C16234T It is observed in southern Africa among Bantu speakers 2 including in Zambia Madagascar and South Africa Haplogroup L2a1h edit L2a1h has been shown to be present in Israel and Kenya 13 Haplogroup L2a1k edit L2a1k is defined by markers G6722A and T12903C Described as European specific it was previously called subclade L2a1a and has been detected in Czechs Slovaks Croatians Serbs and Bulgarians 40 41 Haplogroup L2a1l edit L2a1l is defined by the mutation C534T It appears in Algeria Sierra Leone among Mende people and The Gambia among Wolof people and was present in ancient Spain 42 Haplogroup L2a1l1 edit L2a1l1 is observed among the Nuna 43 and Mossi 44 peoples of Burkina Faso Haplogroup L2a1l2 edit L2a1l2 is present in people in various parts of West Africa North Africa and western Europe including Mandinka people from Guinea Bissau Fula people from The Gambia and Pana people from Burkina Faso 42 Haplogroup L2a1l2a edit L2a1l2a is recognized as an Ashkenazi specific haplogroup seen amongst Ashkenazi Jews with ancestry in Central and Eastern Europe It has also been detected in small numbers in ostensibly non Jewish Polish populations where it is presumed to have come from Ashkenazi admixture 45 However this haplotype constitutes only a very small proportion of Ashkenazi mitochondrial lineages various studies including Behar s have put its incidence at between 1 4 1 6 Haplogroup L2a1l3 edit L2a1l3 is defined by the mutations G14905A and T16357C It is found in Yoruba people in Nigeria and in Algeria Haplogroup L2a1m edit L2a1m is defined by the mutation A13884G It has been found in Burkina Faso 46 and Haiti as well as Oman Yemen Saudi Arabia and Israel 13 Haplogroup L2a1m1 edit L2a1m1 has been found among African Americans and Dominicans Haplogroup L2a1m1a edit L2a1m1a has been found among African Americans and in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Haplogroup L2a1n edit L2a1n is observed among the Yoruba people of Nigeria and the Mossi people of Burkina Faso and has also been detected in Cameroon and Portugal on the Iberian Peninsula 13 Haplogroup L2a1o edit L2a1o is defined by the mutation T12438C It has been detected in Syria and Burkina Faso 46 Haplogroup L2a1p edit L2a1p is defined by the mutations A9410G T13818C and C15626T It is found in Nigeria Kassena people in Burkina Faso and Moroccan Jews It is also present in the United States of America 13 Haplogroup L2a2 edit L2a2 is characteristic of the Mbuti Pygmies 9 Haplogroup L2b c edit L2b c probably evolved around 62 000 years ago 1 Haplogroup L2b edit This subclade is predominantly found in West Africa but it is spread all over Africa 47 branches of L2b also include L2b1a1 which is found in Liguria Italy and L2b3 which is found in Galicia Spain 13 Haplogroup L2c edit L2c is most frequent in West Africa and may have arisen there 17 Specially present in Senegal at 39 Cape Verde 16 and Guinea Bissau 16 6 Branches of L2c has also been known to be found in Europe in areas such as on the Iberian Peninsula in Andalusia Spain Catalonia Spain and also in continental North Western Europe in the Netherlands 13 Haplogroup L2d edit L2d is most frequent in West Africa where it may have arisen 17 It is also found in Yemen Mozambique and Sudan 16 Haplogroup L2e edit L2e former L2d2 is typical in West Africa 5 It is also found in Tunisia 48 and among Mandinka people from Guinea Bissau and African Americans 47 Tree edit nbsp Phylogenetic tree of haplogroup L2 subclades Numbers in the left side bar represents estimated time in thousand years ago Colour scheme corresponding to the probable origin of each clade This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup L2 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 Most Recent Common Ancestor MRCA L1 2 3 4 5 6 L2 3 4 6 L2 L2a b c d L2a L2a1 L2a1a L2a1a1 L2a1a2 L2a1a2a L2a1a2a1 L2a1a2b L2a1a3 16189 16192 L2a1b L2a1b1 L2a1f L2a1f1 143 L2a1c L2a1c1 L2a1c2 L2a1c3 L2a1c4 L2a1d L2a1e L2a1e1 L2a1h 16189 L2a1i L2a1j L2a1k 16192 L2a1l L2a1l1 L2a1l1a L2a1l2 L2a2 L2a2a L2a2a1 L2a2b L2a2b1 L2b c L2b L2b1 L2b1a L2b1a2 L2b1a3 L2c L2c2 L2c2a L2c3 L2d L2d1 L2d1a L2eSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haplogroup L2 mtDNA Genealogical DNA test Genetic genealogy Human mitochondrial genetics Population genetics Human mitochondrial DNA haplogroupsPhylogenetic tree of human mitochondrial DNA mtDNA haplogroups Mitochondrial Eve L L0 L1 6 L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6M N CZ D E G Q O A S R I W X YC Z B F R0 pre JT P UHV JT KH V J TReferences edit a b c d Soares Pedro Luca Ermini Noel Thomson Maru Mormina Teresa Rito Arne Rohl Antonio Salas Stephen Oppenheimer Vincent Macaulay Martin B Richards 4 Jun 2009 Correcting for Purifying Selection An Improved Human Mitochondrial Molecular Clock The American Journal of Human Genetics 84 6 82 93 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2009 05 001 PMC 2694979 PMID 19500773 a b Silva Marina 2015 60 000 years of interactions between Central and Eastern Africa documented by major African mitochondrial haplogroup L2 Scientific Reports Nature 5 12526 Bibcode 2015NatSR 512526S doi 10 1038 srep12526 PMC 4515592 PMID 26211407 a b van Oven Mannis Manfred Kayser 13 Oct 2008 Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation Human Mutation 30 2 E386 E394 doi 10 1002 humu 20921 PMID 18853457 S2CID 27566749 Gonder Mary Katherine Mortensen Holly M Reed Floyd A de Sousa Alexandra Tishkoff Sarah A 2007 Whole mtDNA Genome Sequence Analysis of Ancient African Lineages Molecular Biology and Evolution 24 3 757 768 doi 10 1093 molbev msl209 PMID 17194802 a b c d e f Salas Antonio et al The Making of the African mtDNA Landscape American Journal of Human Genetics vol 71 no 5 2002 pp 1082 1111 a b c Rosa Alexandra Brehm A Kivisild T Metspalu E Villems R et al 2004 MtDNA Profile of West Africa Guineans Towards a Better Understanding of the Senegambia Region Annals of Human Genetics 68 Pt 4 340 352 doi 10 1046 j 1529 8817 2004 00100 x hdl 10400 13 3044 PMID 15225159 S2CID 15391342 Atlas of the Human Journey Haplogroup L2 Archived 2011 10 06 at the Wayback Machine The Genographic Project National Geographic a b Silva Marina Alshamali Farida Silva Paula Carrilho Carla Mandlate Flavio Jesus Trovoada Maria Cerny Viktor Pereira Luisa Soares Pedro 2015 60 000 years of interactions between Central and Eastern Africa documented by major African mitochondrial haplogroup L2 Scientific Reports 5 12526 Bibcode 2015NatSR 512526S doi 10 1038 srep12526 PMC 4515592 PMID 26211407 a b Quintana Murci et al 2008 Maternal traces of deep common ancestry and asymmetric gene flow between Pygmy hunter gatherers and Bantu speaking farmers Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105 5 1599 a b Sadie Anderson Mann 2006 Phylogenetic and phylogeographic analysis of African mitochondrial DNA variation Archived 2011 09 10 at the Wayback Machine a b Cerny V et al July 2007 A Bidirectional Corridor in the Sahel Sudan Belt and the Distinctive Features of the Chad Basin Populations A History Revealed by the Mitochondrial DNA Genome Annals of Human Genetics 71 4 433 452 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1809 2006 00339 x PMID 17233755 S2CID 28105243 a b Veeramah Krishna R et al 2010 Little genetic differentiation as assessed by uniparental markers in the presence of substantial language variation in peoples of the Cross River region of Nigeria a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Reconstructing ancient mitochondrial DNA links between Africa and Europe Supplemental Data S2 by M Cerezo et al Sirak Kendra Frenandes Daniel Novak Mario Van Gerven Dennis Pinhasi Ron 2016 Abstract Book of the IUAES Inter Congress 2016 A community divided Revealing the community genome s of Medieval Kulubnarti using next generation sequencing Abstract Book of the Iuaes Inter Congress 2016 IUAES 115 Cerezo Maria et al 2011 New insights into the Lake Chad Basin population structure revealed by high throughput genotyping of mitochondrial DNA coding SNPs PLOS ONE 6 4 e18682 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 618682C CiteSeerX 10 1 1 291 8871 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0018682 PMC 3080428 PMID 21533064 a b c Toomas Kivisild et al Ethiopian Mitochondria DNA Heritage Tracking Gene Flow Across and Around the Gate of Tears American Journal of Human Genetics vol 75 no 5 November 2004 pp 752 770 a b c d Antonio Torroni et al Do the Four Clades of the mtDNA Haplogroup L2 Evolve at Different Rates American Journal of Human Genetics vol 69 2001 pp 348 1356 Watson E et al September 1997 Mitochondrial footprints of human expansions in Africa American Journal of Human Genetics 61 3 691 704 doi 10 1086 515503 PMC 1715955 PMID 9326335 Vigilant L et al 1991 09 27 African populations and the evolution of human mitochondrial DNA Science 253 5027 1503 1507 Bibcode 1991Sci 253 1503V doi 10 1126 science 1840702 PMID 1840702 Kampira E Kumwenda J van Oosterhout JJ Dandara C Aug 2013 Mitochondrial DNA subhaplogroups L0a2 and L2a modify susceptibility to peripheral neuropathy in malawian adults on stavudine containing highly active antiretroviral therapy J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 63 5 647 652 doi 10 1097 QAI 0b013e3182968ea5 PMC 3815091 PMID 23614993 a b c Salas A Richards M De la Fe T Lareu MV Sobrino B Sanchez Diz P Macaulay V Carracedo A The making of the African mtDNA landscape Am J Hum Genet 2002 Nov 71 5 1082 111 doi 10 1086 344348 Epub 2002 Oct 22 PMID 12395296 PMCID PMC385086 Non Amy ANALYSES OF GENETIC DATA WITHIN AN INTERDISCIPLINARY FRAMEWORK TO INVESTIGATE RECENT HUMAN EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY AND COMPLEX DISEASE PDF University of Florida Retrieved 2 November 2016 Manco Jean 2013 Ancestral Journeys The Peopling of Europe from the First Venturers to the Vikings Thames amp Hudson p 88 ISBN 978 0500771822 Retrieved 29 September 2017 Skoglund et al September 21 2017 Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure Cell 171 1 59 71 doi 10 1016 j cell 2017 08 049 PMC 5679310 PMID 28938123 Gonzalez A M et al 2006 Mitochondrial DNA Variation in Mauritania and Mali and their Genetic Relationship to Other Western Africa Populations GenBank Accession number MN894712 1 GenBank Accession number KJ185827 1 GenBank Accession number KJ185589 1 a b Wiley Online Library Scientific research articles journals books and reference works Archived from the original on 2010 08 05 Retrieved 2009 05 19 a b Lascaro Daniela Castellana Stefano Gasparre Giuseppe Romeo Giovanni Saccone Cecilia Attimonelli Marcella 2008 The RHNumtS compilation Features and bioinformatics approaches to locate and quantify Human NumtS BMC Genomics 9 267 doi 10 1186 1471 2164 9 267 PMC 2447851 PMID 18522722 L2a1c1 MTree YFull com Retrieved 2023 12 15 GenBank Accession number MF437155 1 GenBank Accession number KR135841 1 GenBank Accession number KR135855 1 GenBank Accession number KR135884 1 GenBank Accession number KJ185590 1 GenBank Accession number KJ185686 1 GenBank Accession number KJ185955 1 GenBank Accession number KJ185403 1 GenBank Accession number KC622248 1 GenBank Accession number MN894787 1 Cerezo Maria et al Reconstructing ancient mitochondrial DNA links between Africa and Europe Genome research vol 22 5 2012 821 6 doi 10 1101 gr 134452 111 https genome cshlp org content suppl 2012 03 01 gr 134452 111 DC1 Cerezo GR 2011 L Europe manuscript Supplemental Data S2 final version pdf Malyarchuk Boris A Miroslava Derenko Maria Perkova Tomasz Grzybowski Tomas Vanecek Jan Lazur September 2008 Reconstructing the phylogeny of African mitochondrial DNA lineages in Slavs European Journal of Human Genetics 16 9 1091 1096 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2008 70 PMID 18398433 S2CID 21522848 Davidovic Slobodan Boris Malyarchuk Jelena M Aleksic Miroslava Derenko Vladanka Topalovic Andrey Litvinov Milena Stevanovic Natasa Kovacevic Grujicic March 2015 Mitochondrial DNA perspective of Serbian genetic diversity American Journal of Biological Anthropology 156 3 449 465 doi 10 1002 ajpa 22670 PMID 25418795 a b Brook Kevin Alan 2022 The Maternal Genetic Lineages of Ashkenazic Jews Academic Studies Press p 78 ISBN 978 1644699843 GenBank Accession number JQ044956 1 GenBank Accession number JQ044919 1 Mielnik Sikorska Marta Daca Patrycja Malyarchuk Boris Derenko Miroslava Skonieczna Katarzyna Perkova Maria Dobosz Tadeusz Grzybowski Tomasz 2013 01 14 The History of Slavs Inferred from Complete Mitochondrial Genome Sequences PLOS One 8 1 e54360 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0054360 a b Supplementary Table 3 in 60 000 years of interactions between Central and Eastern Africa documented by major African mitochondrial haplogroup L2 by Marina Silva Farida Alshamali et al 2015 a b Behar et al 2008b The Dawn of Human Matrilineal Diversity Am J Hum Genet 2008 May 9 82 5 1130 1140 Costa Marta D et al April 2009 Data from complete mtDNA sequencing of Tunisian centenarians testing haplogroup association and the golden mean to longevity 1 Mechanisms of Ageing and Development 130 4 222 226 PMID 19133286 doi 10 1016 j mad 2008 12 001External links editIan Logan s Haplogroup L2 Mitochondrial DNA Site Ian Logan s L2bcd Mitochondrial DNA Site Mannis van Oven s PhyloTree org mtDNA subtree L Spread of Haplogroup L2 from National Geographic Cerezo M Achilli A Olivieri A Perego UA Gomez Carballa A BrisighelliF Lancioni H Lopez Soto M Carracedo A Capelli C Torroni A Salas A 2 Reconstructing Ancient MtDna Research Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haplogroup L2 amp oldid 1192159150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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