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Haplogroup N (mtDNA)

Haplogroup N is a human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) clade. A macrohaplogroup, its descendant lineages are distributed across many continents. Like its sibling macrohaplogroup M, macrohaplogroup N is a descendant of the haplogroup L3.

Haplogroup N
Ancient dispersal of haplogroup L3, its descendant M and N lineages, and other mtDNA clades. Numbers represent thousand years before present.
Possible time of origin~55-70,000 YBP[1][2] or 50-65,000 YBP[3]
Possible place of originAsia[4][5][6][7][8] or East Africa[9][10][11]
AncestorL3
DescendantsN1'5, N2, N8, N9, N10, N11, N13, N14, N21, N22, A, I, O, R, S, X, Y, W
Defining mutations8701, 9540, 10398, 10873, 15301[12]

All mtDNA haplogroups found outside of Africa are descendants of either haplogroup N or its sibling haplogroup M. M and N are the signature maternal haplogroups that define the theory of the recent African origin of modern humans and subsequent early human migrations around the world. The global distribution of haplogroups N and M indicates that there was likely at least one major prehistoric migration of humans out of Africa, with both N and M later evolving outside the continent.[7]

Origins

 
Suggested routes of the initial settlement of Europe based on mtDNA haplogroups M and N, Metspalu et al. 2004. A major population split near the Persian Gulf would explain the ubiquity of Haplogroup N and the absence of Haplogroup M in West Eurasia

There is widespread agreement in the scientific community concerning the African ancestry of haplogroup L3 (haplogroup N's parent clade).[13] However, whether or not the mutations which define haplogroup N itself first occurred within Asia or Africa has been a subject for ongoing discussion and study.[13]

The out of Africa hypothesis has gained generalized consensus. However, many specific questions remain unsettled. To know whether the two M and N macrohaplogroups that colonized Eurasia were already present in Africa before the exit is puzzling.

Torroni et al. 2006 state that Haplogroups M, N and R occurred somewhere between East Africa and the Persian Gulf.[14]

Also related to the origins of haplogroup N is whether ancestral haplogroups M, N and R were part of the same migration out of Africa, or whether Haplogroup N left Africa via the Northern route through the Levant, and M left Africa via Horn of Africa. This theory was suggested because haplogroup N is by far the predominant haplogroup in Western Eurasia, and haplogroup M is absent in Western Eurasia, but is predominant in India and is common in regions East of India. However, the mitochondrial DNA variation in isolated "relict" populations in southeast Asia and among Indigenous Australians supports the view that there was only a single dispersal from Africa. Southeast Asian populations and Indigenous Australians all possess deep rooted clades of both haplogroups M and N.[15] The distribution of the earliest branches within haplogroups M, N, and R across Eurasia and Oceania therefore supports a three-founder-mtDNA scenario and a single migration route out of Africa.[16] These findings also highlight the importance of Indian subcontinent in the early genetic history of human settlement and expansion.[17]

Asian origin hypothesis

The hypothesis of Asia as the place of origin of haplogroup N is supported by the following:

  1. Haplogroup N is found in all parts of the world but has low frequencies in Sub-Saharan Africa. According to a number of studies, the presence of Haplogroup N in Africa is most likely the result of back migration from Eurasia.[6]
  2. The oldest clades of macrohaplogroup N are found in Asia and Australia.
  3. It would be paradoxical that haplogroup N had traveled all the distance to Australia or New World yet failed to affect other populations within Africa besides North Africans and Horn Africans.
  4. The mitochondrial DNA variation in isolated "relict" populations in southeast Asia supports the view that there was only a single dispersal from Africa.[15] The distribution of the earliest branches within haplogroups M, N, and R across Eurasia and Oceania provides additional evidence for a three-founder-mtDNA scenario and a single migration route out of Africa.[16] These findings also highlight the importance of Indian subcontinent in the early genetic history of human settlement and expansion.[17] Therefore, N's history is similar to M and R which have their most probable origin in South Asia.

A study (Vai et al. 2019), finds a basal branch of maternal haplogroup N in early Neolithic North African remains from the Libyan site of Takarkori. The authors propose that N most likely split from L3 in the Arabian peninsula and later migrated back to North Africa, with its sister haplogroup M also likely splitting from L3 in the Middle East, but also suggest that N may have possibly diverged in North Africa, and state that more information is necessary to be certain.[3]

African origin hypothesis

According to Toomas Kivisild "the lack of L3 lineages other than M and N in India and among non-African mitochondria in general suggests that the earliest migration(s) of modern humans already carried these two mtDNA ancestors, via a departure route over the Horn of Africa.[9]

In 2019, a study by Vai et al. presented evidence of a basal branch of haplogroup N from the Neolithic Sahara. They suggest that N either diverged from haplogroup L3 in the Near East (possibly in the Arabian peninsula, following the exit of L3 from Africa), then back-migrated to North Africa, or that it instead may have originated in North Africa (having diverged from L3 there).[3]

Distribution

 
Dispersal route of Haplogroup N and its subgroups

Haplogroup N is derived from the ancestral L3 macrohaplogroup, which represents the migration discussed in the theory of the recent African origin of modern humans. Haplogroup N is the ancestral haplogroup to almost all clades today distributed in Europe and Oceania, as well as many found in Asia and the Americas. It is believed to have arisen at a similar time to haplogroup M. Haplogroup N subclades like haplogroup U6 are also found at high to low frequencies in northwest and northeast Africa due to a back migration from Europe or Asia during the Paleolithic c. 46,000 ybp, the estimated age of the basal U6* clade.[18] Other haplogroups common in Western Eurasia, such as R0, J, and T, are also common in North Africa and parts of East Africa.

The haplogroup N descendant lineage U6 has been found among Iberomaurusian specimens at the Taforalt site, which date from the Epipaleolithic.[19] In Sub-Saharan Africa, several ancient samples of N have been found, the oldest so far being K1a dating back to about 2000 BC in Kenya.[20] Additionally, haplogroup N predominated among ancient Egyptian mummies excavated at the Abusir el-Meleq archaeological site in Middle Egypt, which date from the Pre-Ptolemaic/late New Kingdom, Ptolemaic, and Roman periods.[21]

Subgroups distribution

Haplogroup N's derived clades include the macro-haplogroup R and its descendants, and haplogroups A, I, S, W, X, and Y.

Rare unclassified haplogroup N* has been found among fossils belonging to the Cardial and Epicardial culture (Cardium pottery) and the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B.[22] A rare unclassified form of N has been also been reported in modern Algeria.[23]

  • Haplogroup N1'5
  • Haplogroup N2
    • Haplogroup N2a – small clade found in West Europe.[31]
    • Haplogroup W[32] – found in Western Eurasia and South Asia[33]
  • Haplogroup N3 – all subgroups have so far only been found in Belarus
      • Haplogroup N3a
      • Haplogroup N3a1
    • Haplogroup N3b
  • Haplogroup N7 – all subgroups have so far only been found in Cambodia
    • Haplogroup N7a
      • Haplogroup N7a1
      • Haplogroup N7a2
    • Haplogroup N7b
  • Haplogroup N8 – found in China.[34]
  • Haplogroup N9 – found in Far East.[24] [TMRCA 45,709.7 ± 7,931.5 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
    • Haplogroup N9a [TMRCA 17,520.4 ± 4,389.8 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
      • Haplogroup N9a12 – Khon Mueang (Pai District)[36][37]
      • Haplogroup N9a-C16261T
        • Haplogroup N9a-C16261T* – Vietnam (Kinh)[38][37]
        • Haplogroup N9a-A4129G-A4913G-T12354C-A12612G-C12636T-T16311C!!! – Tashkurgan (Kyrgyz)[39][37]
        • Haplogroup N9a1'3 [TMRCA 15,007.4 ± 6,060.1 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
          • Haplogroup N9a1 – Chinese (Hakka in Taiwan, etc.), She, Tu, Uyghur, Tuvan, Mongolia, Khamnigan,[40] Korea,[41][40] Japan [TMRCA 9,200 (95% CI 7,100 <-> 11,600) ybp[37]]
          • Haplogroup N9a3 – China [TMRCA 11,500 (95% CI 7,500 <-> 16,800) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a3a – Japan, Korean (Seoul), Taiwan (incl. Paiwan), Thailand (Mon from Lopburi Province and Kanchanaburi Province[36]), China, Uyghur, Kyrgyz (Tashkurgan), Kazakhstan, Buryat, Russia (Belgorod, Chechen Republic, etc.), Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus, Lithuania, Poland, Czech (West Bohemia), Hungary, Austria, Germany [TMRCA 8,280.9 ± 5,124.4 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup N9a2'4'5'11 [TMRCA 15,305.4 ± 4,022.6 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
          • Haplogroup N9a2 – Japan, Korea,[41] China (Barghut in Hulunbuir, Uyghur, etc.) [TMRCA 10,700 (95% CI 8,200 <-> 13,800) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a2a – Japan, Korea, Uyghur [TMRCA 8,100 (95% CI 6,500 <-> 10,000) ybp[37]]
              • Haplogroup N9a2a1 – Japan [TMRCA 4,200 (95% CI 1,850 <-> 8,400) ybp[37]]
              • Haplogroup N9a2a2 – Japan, Korea, Volga-Ural region (Tatar)[40] [TMRCA 5,700 (95% CI 3,500 <-> 8,900) ybp[37]]
              • Haplogroup N9a2a3 – Japan, Hulun-Buir region (Barghut)[40] [TMRCA 4,700 (95% CI 2,400 <-> 8,400) ybp[37]]
              • Haplogroup N9a2a4 – Japan [TMRCA 2,800 (95% CI 600 <-> 7,900) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a2b – China
            • Haplogroup N9a2c [TMRCA 7,200 (95% CI 3,600 <-> 12,700) ybp[37]]
              • Haplogroup N9a2c* – Japan
              • Haplogroup N9a2c1 – Japan, Korea,[37] Uyghur [TMRCA 2,600 (95% CI 1,250 <-> 4,900) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a2d – Japan, Korea[37] [TMRCA 5,200 (95% CI 1,800 <-> 12,000) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a2e – China
          • Haplogroup N9a4 – Malaysia [TMRCA 7,900 (95% CI 3,900 <-> 14,300) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a4a – Japan [TMRCA 4,400 (95% CI 1,500 <-> 10,200) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a4b [TMRCA 5,700 (95% CI 2,400 <-> 11,400) ybp[37]]
              • Haplogroup N9a4b* – Japan
              • Haplogroup N9a4b1 – China (Minnan in Taiwan, etc.)
              • Haplogroup N9a4b2 – China
          • Haplogroup N9a5 [TMRCA 8,700 (95% CI 4,700 <-> 15,000) ybp[37]]
            • Haplogroup N9a5* – Korea
            • Haplogroup N9a5a – Japan
            • Haplogroup N9a5b – Japan [TMRCA 5,300 (95% CI 1,150 <-> 15,300) ybp[37]]
          • Haplogroup N9a11 – Taiwan (Hakka, Minnan), Laos (Lao from Luang Prabang[36])
        • Haplogroup N9a6 – Thailand (Phuan from Lopburi Province,[36] Khon Mueang from Lamphun Province,[36] Phutai from Sakon Nakhon Province,[36] Lawa from Mae Hong Son Province,[36] Soa from Sakon Nakhon Province[36]), Vietnam, Sumatra [TMRCA 11,972.5 ± 5,491.7 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
          • Haplogroup N9a6a – Cambodia (Khmer), Malaysia (Bidayuh, Jehai, Temuan, Kensiu), Sumatra, Sundanese
          • Haplogroup N9a6b – Malaysia (Seletar)
        • Haplogroup N9a7 – Japan
        • Haplogroup N9a8 – Japan, China, Buryat
        • Haplogroup N9a9 – Chelkans (Biyka, Turochak), Tubalar (North-East Altai), Kyrgyz (Kyrgyzstan), China, Ukraine (Vinnytsia Oblast), Romania (10th century AD Dobruja)
        • Haplogroup N9a10 – Thailand (Khon Mueang from Mae Hong Son Province, Chiang Mai Province, Lamphun Province, and Lampang Province,[36] Shan from Mae Hong Son Province,[36] Lao Isan from Loei Province,[36] Black Tai from Kanchanaburi Province,[36] Phuan from Sukhothai Province and Phichit Province,[36] Mon from Kanchanaburi Province[36]), Laos (Lao from Luang Prabang,[36] Hmong[38]), Vietnam (Tay Nung), China (incl. Han in Chongqing)
          • Haplogroup N9a10a – China, Taiwan (Ami)
            • Haplogroup N9a10a1 – Chinese (Suzhou)
            • Haplogroup N9a10a2 – Philippines (Ivatan), Taiwan (Ami)
              • Haplogroup N9a10a2a – Taiwan (Atayal, Tsou)
          • Haplogroup N9a10b – China
    • Haplogroup N9b – Japan, Udegey, Nanai, Korea[41] [TMRCA 14,885.6 ± 4,092.5 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
      • Haplogroup N9b1 – Japan [TMRCA 11,859.3 ± 3,760.2 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup N9b1a – Japan [TMRCA 10,645.2 ± 3,690.3 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup N9b1b – Japan [TMRCA 2,746.5 ± 2,947.0 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup N9b1c – Japan [TMRCA 6,987.8 ± 4,967.0 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
          • Haplogroup N9b1c1 – Japan
      • Haplogroup N9b2 – Japan [TMRCA 13,369.7 ± 4,110.0 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup N9b2a – Japan
      • Haplogroup N9b3 – Japan [TMRCA 7,629.8 ± 6,007.6 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
      • Haplogroup N9b4 – Japan, Ulchi
    • Haplogroup Y[43] – found especially among Nivkhs, Ulchs, Nanais, Negidals, Ainus, and the population of Nias Island, with a moderate frequency among other Tungusic peoples, Koreans, Mongols, Koryaks, Itelmens, Chinese, Japanese, Tajiks, Island Southeast Asians (including Taiwanese aborigines), and some Turkic peoples[26] [TMRCA 24,576.4 ± 7,083.2 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
      • Haplogroup Y1 – Korea, Taiwan (Minnan), Thailand (Iu Mien from Phayao Province[44][37]), Poland, Slovakia, Czech Republic [TMRCA 14,689.5 ± 5,264.3 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup Y1a – Nivkh, Ulchi, Hezhen, Udegey, Even, Zabaikal Buryat, Mongolian, Daur, Korea, Han, Tibet, Ukraine[45] [TMRCA 7,467.5 ± 5,526.7 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
          • Haplogroup Y1a1 – Uyghur, Kyrgyz, Yakut, Buryat, Hezhen, Udegey, Evenk (Taimyr), Ket, Slovakia,[45] Romania,[45] Hungary,[45] Turkey[45]
          • Haplogroup Y1a2 – Koryak, Even (Kamchatka)
        • Haplogroup Y1b – Volga Tatar [TMRCA 9,222.8 ± 4,967.0 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
          • Haplogroup Y1b1 – Chinese (Han from Lanzhou,[46] etc.), Japanese, Korea, Russia
        • Haplogroup Y1c - Korea (especially Jeju Island), Khamnigan, Uyghur, Canada
      • Haplogroup Y2 – Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Khamnigan, South Africa (Cape Coloured) [TMRCA 7,279.3 ± 2,894.5 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup Y2a – Taiwan (Atayal, Saisiyat, Tsou), Philippines (Maranao), Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Hawaii, USA (Hispanic), Spain, Ireland [TMRCA 4,929.5 ± 2,789.6 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
        • Haplogroup Y2b – Japan, South Korea, Buryat [TMRCA 1,741.8 ± 3,454.2 ybp; CI=95%[35]]
  • Haplogroup N10 – found in China (Han from Shanghai, Jiangsu, Fujian, Guangdong, and Yunnan, Hani and Yi from Yunnan, She from Guizhou, Uzbek from Xinjiang) and Southeast Asia (Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia).[34]
  • Haplogroup N11 – Mainland China & Philippines: Han Chinese (Yunnan, Sichuan, and Hubei), Tibetan (Xizang), Dongxiang (Gansu), Oroqen (Inner Mongolia) and Mamanwa (Philippines).[34][47]
    • N11a
      • N11a1
      • N11a2 – ethnicity unknown, China
    • N11b – Mamanwa, Philippines
  • Haplogroup O or N12- found among Indigenous Australians and the Floresians of Indonesia.
  • Haplogroup N13 – Aboriginal Australians[48]
  • Haplogroup N14 – Aboriginal Australians[49]
  • Haplogroup N21 – In ethnic Malays from Malaysia and Indonesia.[50]
  • Haplogroup N22 – Southeast Asia, Bangladesh, India, Japan[51]
  • Haplogroup A[52] – found in Central and East Asia, as well as among Native Americans.
  • Haplogroup S[53] – extended among Aboriginal Australians.
  • Haplogroup X[54] – found most often in Western Eurasia, but also present in the Americas.[24]
    • Haplogroup X1 – found primarily in North Africa as well as in some populations of the Levant, notably among the Druze
    • Haplogroup X2 – found in Western Eurasia, Siberia and among Native Americans
  • Haplogroup R[55] – a very extended and diversified macro-haplogroup.

Subclades

Tree

This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup N subclades is based on the paper by Mannis van Oven and Manfred Kayser Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation[12] and subsequent published research.

  • N
    • N1'5
      • N1
        • N1a'c'd'e'I
          • N1a'd'e'I
            • N1a'e'I
              • N1a
                • N1a1
                  • N1a1a
              • N1e'I
                • I
                • N1e
            • N1d
          • N1c
        • N1b
          • N1b1
            • N1b1a
            • N1b1b
            • N1b1c
              • N1b1d
          • N1b2
      • N5
    • N2
      • N2a
      • W
    • N3
      • N3a
        • N3a1
      • N3b
    • N7
      • N7a
        • N7a1
        • N7a2
      • N7b
    • N8
    • N9
      • N9a
        • N9a1'3
          • N9a1
          • N9a3
        • N9a2'4'5
          • N9a2
            • N9a2a'b
              • N9a2a
              • N9a2b
            • N9a2c
            • N9a2d
          • N9a4
          • N9a5
        • N9a6
          • N9a6a
      • N9b
        • N9b1
          • N9b1a
          • N9b1b
          • N9b1c
            • N9b1c1
        • N9b2
        • N9b3
      • Y
    • N10
      • N10a
      • N10b
    • N11
      • N11a
        • N11a1
        • N11a2
      • N11b
    • N13
    • N14
    • N21
    • N22
    • A
    • O
      • O1
    • S
    • X
    • R

See also

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

  1. ^ Soares, Pedro; Ermini, Luca; Thomson, Noel; Mormina, Maru; Rito, Teresa; Röhl, Arne; Salas, Antonio; Oppenheimer, Stephen; MacAulay, Vincent; Richards, Martin B. (2009). "Correcting for Purifying Selection: An Improved Human Mitochondrial Molecular Clock". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 84 (6): 740–59. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.05.001. PMC 2694979. PMID 19500773.
  2. ^ Soares, P; Alshamali, F; Pereira, J. B; Fernandes, V; Silva, N. M; Afonso, C; Costa, M. D; Musilova, E; MacAulay, V; Richards, M. B; Cerny, V; Pereira, L (2011). "The Expansion of mtDNA Haplogroup L3 within and out of Africa". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 29 (3): 915–927. doi:10.1093/molbev/msr245. PMID 22096215.
  3. ^ a b c Vai S, Sarno S, Lari M, Luiselli D, Manzi G, Gallinaro M, Mataich S, Hübner A, Modi A, Pilli E, Tafuri MA, Caramelli D, di Lernia S (March 2019). "Ancestral mitochondrial N lineage from the Neolithic 'green' Sahara". Sci Rep. 9 (1): 3530. Bibcode:2019NatSR...9.3530V. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-39802-1. PMC 6401177. PMID 30837540.
  4. ^ MacAulay, V.; Hill, C; Achilli, A; Rengo, C; Clarke, D; Meehan, W; Blackburn, J; Semino, O; et al. (2005). "Single, Rapid Coastal Settlement of Asia Revealed by Analysis of Complete Mitochondrial Genomes" (PDF). Science. 308 (5724): 1034–36. Bibcode:2005Sci...308.1034M. doi:10.1126/science.1109792. PMID 15890885. S2CID 31243109. Haplogroup L3 (the African clade that gave rise to the two basal non-African clades, haplogroups M and N) is 84,000 years old, and haplogroups M and N themselves are almost identical in age at 63,000 years old, with haplogroup R diverging rapidly within haplogroup N 60,000 years ago.
  5. ^ Richards, Martin; Bandelt, Hans-Jürgen; Kivisild, Toomas; Oppenheimer, Stephen (2006). "A Model for the Dispersal of Modern Humans out of Africa". In Bandelt, Hans-Jürgen; Macaulay, Vincent; Richards, Martin (eds.). Human Mitochondrial DNA and the Evolution of Homo sapiens. Nucleic Acids and Molecular Biology. Vol. 18. pp. 225–65. doi:10.1007/3-540-31789-9_10. ISBN 978-3-540-31788-3. subclades. L3b d, L3e and L3f, for instance, are clearly of African origin, whereas haplogroup N is of apparently Eurasian origin
  6. ^ a b Gonder, M. K.; Mortensen, H. M.; Reed, F. A.; De Sousa, A.; Tishkoff, S. A. (2006). "Whole-mtDNA Genome Sequence Analysis of Ancient African Lineages". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 24 (3): 757–68. doi:10.1093/molbev/msl209. PMID 17194802.
  7. ^ a b Olivieri, A.; Achilli, A.; Pala, M.; Battaglia, V.; Fornarino, S.; Al-Zahery, N.; Scozzari, R.; Cruciani, F.; Behar, D. M.; Dugoujon, J.-M.; Coudray, C.; Santachiara-Benerecetti, A. S.; Semino, O.; Bandelt, H.-J.; Torroni, A. (2006). "The mtDNA Legacy of the Levantine Early Upper Palaeolithic in Africa". Science. 314 (5806): 1767–70. Bibcode:2006Sci...314.1767O. doi:10.1126/science.1135566. PMID 17170302. S2CID 3810151. The scenario of a back-migration into Africa is supported by another feature of the mtDNA phylogeny. Haplogroup M's Eurasian sister clade, haplogroup N, which has a very similar age to M and no indication of an African origin
  8. ^ a b c Abu-Amero, Khaled K; Larruga, José M; Cabrera, Vicente M; González, Ana M (2008). "Mitochondrial DNA structure in the Arabian Peninsula". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 8: 45. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-8-45. PMC 2268671. PMID 18269758.
  9. ^ a b Kivisild T, Rootsi S, Metspalu M, et al. (2003). "The genetic heritage of the earliest settlers persists both in Indian tribal and caste populations". American Journal of Human Genetics. 72 (2): 313–32. doi:10.1086/346068. PMC 379225. PMID 12536373."Also, the lack of L3 lineages other than M and N in India and among non-African mitochondria in general suggests that the earliest migration(s) of modern humans already carried these two mtDNA ancestors, via a departure route over the horn of Africa."
  10. ^ Kivisild; et al. (2007). "Genetic Evidence of Modern Human Dispersals in South Asia". The Evolution and History of Human Populations in South Asia. ISBN 9781402055621.
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  15. ^ a b MacAulay, V.; Hill, C; Achilli, A; Rengo, C; Clarke, D; Meehan, W; Blackburn, J; Semino, O; et al. (2005). "Single, Rapid Coastal Settlement of Asia Revealed by Analysis of Complete Mitochondrial Genomes" (PDF). Science. 308 (5724): 1034–36. Bibcode:2005Sci...308.1034M. doi:10.1126/science.1109792. PMID 15890885. S2CID 31243109.
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External links

  • Haplogroup N
    • Mannis van Oven's – mtDNA subtree N
    • , from National Geographic
    • Hudjashov, G.; Kivisild, T.; Underhill, P. A.; Endicott, P.; Sanchez, J. J.; Lin, A. A.; Shen, P.; Oefner, P.; Renfrew, C.; Villems, R.; Forster, P. (2007). "Revealing the prehistoric settlement of Australia by Y chromosome and mtDNA analysis". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (21): 8726–30. Bibcode:2007PNAS..104.8726H. doi:10.1073/pnas.0702928104. PMC 1885570. PMID 17496137.
    • Katherine Borges' The Haplogroup N mtDNA Study at Family Tree DNA
  • General
    • Ian Logan's

haplogroup, mtdna, this, article, about, human, mtdna, haplogroup, human, haplogroup, haplogroup, m231, haplogroup, human, mitochondrial, mtdna, clade, macrohaplogroup, descendant, lineages, distributed, across, many, continents, like, sibling, macrohaplogroup. This article is about the human mtDNA haplogroup For the human Y DNA haplogroup see Haplogroup N M231 Haplogroup N is a human mitochondrial DNA mtDNA clade A macrohaplogroup its descendant lineages are distributed across many continents Like its sibling macrohaplogroup M macrohaplogroup N is a descendant of the haplogroup L3 Haplogroup NAncient dispersal of haplogroup L3 its descendant M and N lineages and other mtDNA clades Numbers represent thousand years before present Possible time of origin 55 70 000 YBP 1 2 or 50 65 000 YBP 3 Possible place of originAsia 4 5 6 7 8 or East Africa 9 10 11 AncestorL3DescendantsN1 5 N2 N8 N9 N10 N11 N13 N14 N21 N22 A I O R S X Y WDefining mutations8701 9540 10398 10873 15301 12 All mtDNA haplogroups found outside of Africa are descendants of either haplogroup N or its sibling haplogroup M M and N are the signature maternal haplogroups that define the theory of the recent African origin of modern humans and subsequent early human migrations around the world The global distribution of haplogroups N and M indicates that there was likely at least one major prehistoric migration of humans out of Africa with both N and M later evolving outside the continent 7 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Asian origin hypothesis 1 2 African origin hypothesis 2 Distribution 2 1 Subgroups distribution 3 Subclades 3 1 Tree 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOrigins Edit Suggested routes of the initial settlement of Europe based on mtDNA haplogroups M and N Metspalu et al 2004 A major population split near the Persian Gulf would explain the ubiquity of Haplogroup N and the absence of Haplogroup M in West Eurasia There is widespread agreement in the scientific community concerning the African ancestry of haplogroup L3 haplogroup N s parent clade 13 However whether or not the mutations which define haplogroup N itself first occurred within Asia or Africa has been a subject for ongoing discussion and study 13 The out of Africa hypothesis has gained generalized consensus However many specific questions remain unsettled To know whether the two M and N macrohaplogroups that colonized Eurasia were already present in Africa before the exit is puzzling Torroni et al 2006 state that Haplogroups M N and R occurred somewhere between East Africa and the Persian Gulf 14 Also related to the origins of haplogroup N is whether ancestral haplogroups M N and R were part of the same migration out of Africa or whether Haplogroup N left Africa via the Northern route through the Levant and M left Africa via Horn of Africa This theory was suggested because haplogroup N is by far the predominant haplogroup in Western Eurasia and haplogroup M is absent in Western Eurasia but is predominant in India and is common in regions East of India However the mitochondrial DNA variation in isolated relict populations in southeast Asia and among Indigenous Australians supports the view that there was only a single dispersal from Africa Southeast Asian populations and Indigenous Australians all possess deep rooted clades of both haplogroups M and N 15 The distribution of the earliest branches within haplogroups M N and R across Eurasia and Oceania therefore supports a three founder mtDNA scenario and a single migration route out of Africa 16 These findings also highlight the importance of Indian subcontinent in the early genetic history of human settlement and expansion 17 Asian origin hypothesis Edit The hypothesis of Asia as the place of origin of haplogroup N is supported by the following Haplogroup N is found in all parts of the world but has low frequencies in Sub Saharan Africa According to a number of studies the presence of Haplogroup N in Africa is most likely the result of back migration from Eurasia 6 The oldest clades of macrohaplogroup N are found in Asia and Australia It would be paradoxical that haplogroup N had traveled all the distance to Australia or New World yet failed to affect other populations within Africa besides North Africans and Horn Africans The mitochondrial DNA variation in isolated relict populations in southeast Asia supports the view that there was only a single dispersal from Africa 15 The distribution of the earliest branches within haplogroups M N and R across Eurasia and Oceania provides additional evidence for a three founder mtDNA scenario and a single migration route out of Africa 16 These findings also highlight the importance of Indian subcontinent in the early genetic history of human settlement and expansion 17 Therefore N s history is similar to M and R which have their most probable origin in South Asia A study Vai et al 2019 finds a basal branch of maternal haplogroup N in early Neolithic North African remains from the Libyan site of Takarkori The authors propose that N most likely split from L3 in the Arabian peninsula and later migrated back to North Africa with its sister haplogroup M also likely splitting from L3 in the Middle East but also suggest that N may have possibly diverged in North Africa and state that more information is necessary to be certain 3 African origin hypothesis Edit According to Toomas Kivisild the lack of L3 lineages other than M and N in India and among non African mitochondria in general suggests that the earliest migration s of modern humans already carried these two mtDNA ancestors via a departure route over the Horn of Africa 9 In 2019 a study by Vai et al presented evidence of a basal branch of haplogroup N from the Neolithic Sahara They suggest that N either diverged from haplogroup L3 in the Near East possibly in the Arabian peninsula following the exit of L3 from Africa then back migrated to North Africa or that it instead may have originated in North Africa having diverged from L3 there 3 Distribution Edit Dispersal route of Haplogroup N and its subgroups Haplogroup N is derived from the ancestral L3 macrohaplogroup which represents the migration discussed in the theory of the recent African origin of modern humans Haplogroup N is the ancestral haplogroup to almost all clades today distributed in Europe and Oceania as well as many found in Asia and the Americas It is believed to have arisen at a similar time to haplogroup M Haplogroup N subclades like haplogroup U6 are also found at high to low frequencies in northwest and northeast Africa due to a back migration from Europe or Asia during the Paleolithic c 46 000 ybp the estimated age of the basal U6 clade 18 Other haplogroups common in Western Eurasia such as R0 J and T are also common in North Africa and parts of East Africa The haplogroup N descendant lineage U6 has been found among Iberomaurusian specimens at the Taforalt site which date from the Epipaleolithic 19 In Sub Saharan Africa several ancient samples of N have been found the oldest so far being K1a dating back to about 2000 BC in Kenya 20 Additionally haplogroup N predominated among ancient Egyptian mummies excavated at the Abusir el Meleq archaeological site in Middle Egypt which date from the Pre Ptolemaic late New Kingdom Ptolemaic and Roman periods 21 Subgroups distribution Edit Haplogroup N s derived clades include the macro haplogroup R and its descendants and haplogroups A I S W X and Y Rare unclassified haplogroup N has been found among fossils belonging to the Cardial and Epicardial culture Cardium pottery and the Pre Pottery Neolithic B 22 A rare unclassified form of N has been also been reported in modern Algeria 23 Haplogroup N1 5 Haplogroup N1 found in Africa 24 Haplogroup N1b found in Middle East Egypt Gurna 25 Caucasus and Europe N1a c d e I Haplogroup N1c Northern Saudi Arabia Turkey 8 N1a d e I Haplogroup N1d India N1a e I Haplogroup N1a Arabian Peninsula and Northeast Africa 8 Found also in Central Asia and Southern Siberia 26 This branch is well attested in ancient people from various cultures of Neolithic Europe from Hungary to Spain 27 and among the earliest farmers of Anatolia 28 N1e I Haplogroup N1e found in Balochs 29 Burushos 29 and Buryats 26 Haplogroup I 30 West Eurasia and South Asia Haplogroup N5 found in India 16 Haplogroup N2 Haplogroup N2a small clade found in West Europe 31 Haplogroup W 32 found in Western Eurasia and South Asia 33 Haplogroup N3 all subgroups have so far only been found in Belarus Haplogroup N3a Haplogroup N3a1 Haplogroup N3b Haplogroup N7 all subgroups have so far only been found in Cambodia Haplogroup N7a Haplogroup N7a1 Haplogroup N7a2 Haplogroup N7b Haplogroup N8 found in China 34 Haplogroup N9 found in Far East 24 TMRCA 45 709 7 7 931 5 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9a TMRCA 17 520 4 4 389 8 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9a12 Khon Mueang Pai District 36 37 Haplogroup N9a C16261T Haplogroup N9a C16261T Vietnam Kinh 38 37 Haplogroup N9a A4129G A4913G T12354C A12612G C12636T T16311C Tashkurgan Kyrgyz 39 37 Haplogroup N9a1 3 TMRCA 15 007 4 6 060 1 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9a1 Chinese Hakka in Taiwan etc She Tu Uyghur Tuvan Mongolia Khamnigan 40 Korea 41 40 Japan TMRCA 9 200 95 CI 7 100 lt gt 11 600 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a1a Chinese Sichuan Zhanjiang etc TMRCA 7 300 95 CI 3 800 lt gt 12 800 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a1b Kyrgyz Tashkurgan 39 37 Haplogroup N9a1c Vietnam Tay people 42 Thailand Khon Mueang from Chiang Mai Province 36 Lao Isan from Loei Province 36 Haplogroup N9a3 China TMRCA 11 500 95 CI 7 500 lt gt 16 800 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a3a Japan Korean Seoul Taiwan incl Paiwan Thailand Mon from Lopburi Province and Kanchanaburi Province 36 China Uyghur Kyrgyz Tashkurgan Kazakhstan Buryat Russia Belgorod Chechen Republic etc Ukraine Moldova Belarus Lithuania Poland Czech West Bohemia Hungary Austria Germany TMRCA 8 280 9 5 124 4 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9a2 4 5 11 TMRCA 15 305 4 4 022 6 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9a2 Japan Korea 41 China Barghut in Hulunbuir Uyghur etc TMRCA 10 700 95 CI 8 200 lt gt 13 800 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2a Japan Korea Uyghur TMRCA 8 100 95 CI 6 500 lt gt 10 000 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2a1 Japan TMRCA 4 200 95 CI 1 850 lt gt 8 400 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2a2 Japan Korea Volga Ural region Tatar 40 TMRCA 5 700 95 CI 3 500 lt gt 8 900 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2a3 Japan Hulun Buir region Barghut 40 TMRCA 4 700 95 CI 2 400 lt gt 8 400 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2a4 Japan TMRCA 2 800 95 CI 600 lt gt 7 900 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2b China Haplogroup N9a2c TMRCA 7 200 95 CI 3 600 lt gt 12 700 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2c Japan Haplogroup N9a2c1 Japan Korea 37 Uyghur TMRCA 2 600 95 CI 1 250 lt gt 4 900 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2d Japan Korea 37 TMRCA 5 200 95 CI 1 800 lt gt 12 000 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a2e China Haplogroup N9a4 Malaysia TMRCA 7 900 95 CI 3 900 lt gt 14 300 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a4a Japan TMRCA 4 400 95 CI 1 500 lt gt 10 200 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a4b TMRCA 5 700 95 CI 2 400 lt gt 11 400 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a4b Japan Haplogroup N9a4b1 China Minnan in Taiwan etc Haplogroup N9a4b2 China Haplogroup N9a5 TMRCA 8 700 95 CI 4 700 lt gt 15 000 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a5 Korea Haplogroup N9a5a Japan Haplogroup N9a5b Japan TMRCA 5 300 95 CI 1 150 lt gt 15 300 ybp 37 Haplogroup N9a11 Taiwan Hakka Minnan Laos Lao from Luang Prabang 36 Haplogroup N9a6 Thailand Phuan from Lopburi Province 36 Khon Mueang from Lamphun Province 36 Phutai from Sakon Nakhon Province 36 Lawa from Mae Hong Son Province 36 Soa from Sakon Nakhon Province 36 Vietnam Sumatra TMRCA 11 972 5 5 491 7 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9a6a Cambodia Khmer Malaysia Bidayuh Jehai Temuan Kensiu Sumatra Sundanese Haplogroup N9a6b Malaysia Seletar Haplogroup N9a7 Japan Haplogroup N9a8 Japan China Buryat Haplogroup N9a9 Chelkans Biyka Turochak Tubalar North East Altai Kyrgyz Kyrgyzstan China Ukraine Vinnytsia Oblast Romania 10th century AD Dobruja Haplogroup N9a10 Thailand Khon Mueang from Mae Hong Son Province Chiang Mai Province Lamphun Province and Lampang Province 36 Shan from Mae Hong Son Province 36 Lao Isan from Loei Province 36 Black Tai from Kanchanaburi Province 36 Phuan from Sukhothai Province and Phichit Province 36 Mon from Kanchanaburi Province 36 Laos Lao from Luang Prabang 36 Hmong 38 Vietnam Tay Nung China incl Han in Chongqing Haplogroup N9a10a China Taiwan Ami Haplogroup N9a10a1 Chinese Suzhou Haplogroup N9a10a2 Philippines Ivatan Taiwan Ami Haplogroup N9a10a2a Taiwan Atayal Tsou Haplogroup N9a10b China Haplogroup N9b Japan Udegey Nanai Korea 41 TMRCA 14 885 6 4 092 5 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b1 Japan TMRCA 11 859 3 3 760 2 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b1a Japan TMRCA 10 645 2 3 690 3 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b1b Japan TMRCA 2 746 5 2 947 0 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b1c Japan TMRCA 6 987 8 4 967 0 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b1c1 Japan Haplogroup N9b2 Japan TMRCA 13 369 7 4 110 0 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b2a Japan Haplogroup N9b3 Japan TMRCA 7 629 8 6 007 6 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N9b4 Japan Ulchi Haplogroup Y 43 found especially among Nivkhs Ulchs Nanais Negidals Ainus and the population of Nias Island with a moderate frequency among other Tungusic peoples Koreans Mongols Koryaks Itelmens Chinese Japanese Tajiks Island Southeast Asians including Taiwanese aborigines and some Turkic peoples 26 TMRCA 24 576 4 7 083 2 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup Y1 Korea Taiwan Minnan Thailand Iu Mien from Phayao Province 44 37 Poland Slovakia Czech Republic TMRCA 14 689 5 5 264 3 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup Y1a Nivkh Ulchi Hezhen Udegey Even Zabaikal Buryat Mongolian Daur Korea Han Tibet Ukraine 45 TMRCA 7 467 5 5 526 7 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup Y1a1 Uyghur Kyrgyz Yakut Buryat Hezhen Udegey Evenk Taimyr Ket Slovakia 45 Romania 45 Hungary 45 Turkey 45 Haplogroup Y1a2 Koryak Even Kamchatka Haplogroup Y1b Volga Tatar TMRCA 9 222 8 4 967 0 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup Y1b1 Chinese Han from Lanzhou 46 etc Japanese Korea Russia Haplogroup Y1c Korea especially Jeju Island Khamnigan Uyghur Canada Haplogroup Y2 Chinese Japanese Korean Khamnigan South Africa Cape Coloured TMRCA 7 279 3 2 894 5 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup Y2a Taiwan Atayal Saisiyat Tsou Philippines Maranao Brunei Indonesia Malaysia Hawaii USA Hispanic Spain Ireland TMRCA 4 929 5 2 789 6 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup Y2a1 Philippines Bugkalot Ivatan Surigaonon Manobo Mamanwa etc Malaysia Sabah Acheh Malay from Kedah Banjar from Perak Indonesia Besemah id from Sumatra Medan Bangka Mandar from Sulawesi etc Haplogroup Y2a1a Philippines Kankanaey Ifugao USA Hispanic Haplogroup Y2b Japan South Korea Buryat TMRCA 1 741 8 3 454 2 ybp CI 95 35 Haplogroup N10 found in China Han from Shanghai Jiangsu Fujian Guangdong and Yunnan Hani and Yi from Yunnan She from Guizhou Uzbek from Xinjiang and Southeast Asia Thailand Indonesia Vietnam Malaysia 34 Haplogroup N11 Mainland China amp Philippines Han Chinese Yunnan Sichuan and Hubei Tibetan Xizang Dongxiang Gansu Oroqen Inner Mongolia and Mamanwa Philippines 34 47 N11a N11a1 N11a1a ethnicity unknown Zhejiang eastern China N11a1b Uyghur Xinjiang western China N11a2 ethnicity unknown China N11b Mamanwa Philippines Haplogroup O or N12 found among Indigenous Australians and the Floresians of Indonesia Haplogroup N13 Aboriginal Australians 48 Haplogroup N14 Aboriginal Australians 49 Haplogroup N21 In ethnic Malays from Malaysia and Indonesia 50 Haplogroup N22 Southeast Asia Bangladesh India Japan 51 Haplogroup A 52 found in Central and East Asia as well as among Native Americans Haplogroup S 53 extended among Aboriginal Australians Haplogroup X 54 found most often in Western Eurasia but also present in the Americas 24 Haplogroup X1 found primarily in North Africa as well as in some populations of the Levant notably among the Druze Haplogroup X2 found in Western Eurasia Siberia and among Native Americans Haplogroup R 55 a very extended and diversified macro haplogroup Subclades EditTree Edit This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup N subclades is based on the paper by Mannis van Oven and Manfred Kayser Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation 12 and subsequent published research N N1 5 N1 N1a c d e I N1a d e I N1a e I N1a N1a1 N1a1a N1e I I N1e N1d N1c N1b N1b1 N1b1a N1b1b N1b1c N1b1d N1b2 N5 N2 N2a W N3 N3a N3a1 N3b N7 N7a N7a1 N7a2 N7b N8 N9 N9a N9a1 3 N9a1 N9a3 N9a2 4 5 N9a2 N9a2a b N9a2a N9a2b N9a2c N9a2d N9a4 N9a5 N9a6 N9a6a N9b N9b1 N9b1a N9b1b N9b1c N9b1c1 N9b2 N9b3 Y N10 N10a N10b N11 N11a N11a1 N11a2 N11b N13 N14 N21 N22 A O O1 S X RSee also EditPhylogenetic 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 Soares Pedro Ermini Luca Thomson Noel Mormina Maru Rito Teresa Rohl Arne Salas Antonio Oppenheimer Stephen MacAulay Vincent Richards Martin B 2009 Correcting for Purifying Selection An Improved Human Mitochondrial Molecular Clock The American Journal of Human Genetics 84 6 740 59 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2009 05 001 PMC 2694979 PMID 19500773 Soares P Alshamali F Pereira J B Fernandes V Silva N M Afonso C Costa M D Musilova E MacAulay V Richards M B Cerny V Pereira L 2011 The Expansion of mtDNA Haplogroup L3 within and out of Africa Molecular Biology and Evolution 29 3 915 927 doi 10 1093 molbev msr245 PMID 22096215 a b c Vai S Sarno S Lari M Luiselli D Manzi G Gallinaro M Mataich S Hubner A Modi A Pilli E Tafuri MA Caramelli D di Lernia S March 2019 Ancestral mitochondrial N lineage from the Neolithic green Sahara Sci Rep 9 1 3530 Bibcode 2019NatSR 9 3530V doi 10 1038 s41598 019 39802 1 PMC 6401177 PMID 30837540 MacAulay V Hill C Achilli A Rengo C Clarke D Meehan W Blackburn J Semino O et al 2005 Single Rapid Coastal Settlement of Asia Revealed by Analysis of Complete Mitochondrial Genomes PDF Science 308 5724 1034 36 Bibcode 2005Sci 308 1034M doi 10 1126 science 1109792 PMID 15890885 S2CID 31243109 Haplogroup L3 the African clade that gave rise to the two basal non African clades haplogroups M and N is 84 000 years old and haplogroups M and N themselves are almost identical in age at 63 000 years old with haplogroup R diverging rapidly within haplogroup N 60 000 years ago Richards Martin Bandelt Hans Jurgen Kivisild Toomas Oppenheimer Stephen 2006 A Model for the Dispersal of Modern Humans out of Africa In Bandelt Hans Jurgen Macaulay Vincent Richards Martin eds Human Mitochondrial DNA and the Evolution of Homo sapiens Nucleic Acids and Molecular Biology Vol 18 pp 225 65 doi 10 1007 3 540 31789 9 10 ISBN 978 3 540 31788 3 subclades L3b d L3e and L3f for instance are clearly of African origin whereas haplogroup N is of apparently Eurasian origin a b Gonder M K Mortensen H M Reed F A De Sousa A Tishkoff S A 2006 Whole mtDNA Genome Sequence Analysis of Ancient African Lineages Molecular Biology and Evolution 24 3 757 68 doi 10 1093 molbev msl209 PMID 17194802 a b Olivieri A Achilli A Pala M Battaglia V Fornarino S Al Zahery N Scozzari R Cruciani F Behar D M Dugoujon J M Coudray C Santachiara Benerecetti A S Semino O Bandelt H J Torroni A 2006 The mtDNA Legacy of the Levantine Early Upper Palaeolithic in Africa Science 314 5806 1767 70 Bibcode 2006Sci 314 1767O doi 10 1126 science 1135566 PMID 17170302 S2CID 3810151 The scenario of a back migration into Africa is supported by another feature of the mtDNA phylogeny Haplogroup M s Eurasian sister clade haplogroup N which has a very similar age to M and no indication of an African origin a b c Abu Amero Khaled K Larruga Jose M Cabrera Vicente M Gonzalez Ana M 2008 Mitochondrial DNA structure in the Arabian Peninsula BMC Evolutionary Biology 8 45 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 8 45 PMC 2268671 PMID 18269758 a b Kivisild T Rootsi S Metspalu M et al 2003 The genetic heritage of the earliest settlers persists both in Indian tribal and caste populations American Journal of Human Genetics 72 2 313 32 doi 10 1086 346068 PMC 379225 PMID 12536373 Also the lack of L3 lineages other than M and N in India and among non African mitochondria in general suggests that the earliest migration s of modern humans already carried these two mtDNA ancestors via a departure route over the horn of Africa Kivisild et al 2007 Genetic Evidence of Modern Human Dispersals in South Asia The Evolution and History of Human 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11651 Bibcode 2018NatSR 811651D doi 10 1038 s41598 018 29989 0 PMC 6076260 PMID 30076323 Haplogroup Y Ianlogan co uk 2009 09 22 Retrieved 2010 07 29 Wibhu Kutanan Rasmi Shoocongdej Metawee Srikummool et al 2020 Cultural variation impacts paternal and maternal genetic lineages of the Hmong Mien and Sino Tibetan groups from Thailand European Journal of Human Genetics https doi org 10 1038 s41431 020 0693 x a b c d e Y DNA D Haplogroup Project at Family Tree DNA Hongbin Yao Mengge Wang Xing Zou et al New insights into the fine scale history of western eastern admixture of the northwestern Chinese population in the Hexi Corridor via genome wide genetic legacy Mol Genet Genomics 2021 Mar 1 doi 10 1007 s00438 021 01767 0 Gunnarsdottir Ellen et al 2010 High throughput sequencing of complete human mtDNA genomes from the Philippines Hudjashov Ianlogan co uk Retrieved 2010 07 29 Pierson MJ Martinez Arias R Holland BR Gemmell NJ Hurles ME Penny D 2006 Deciphering past human population movements in Oceania provably optimal trees of 127 mtDNA genomes Molecular Biology and Evolution 23 10 1966 75 doi 10 1093 molbev msl063 PMC 2674580 PMID 16855009 Hill C Soares P Mormina M MacAulay V Meehan W Blackburn J Clarke D Raja J M Ismail P Bulbeck D Oppenheimer S Richards M 2006 Phylogeography and Ethnogenesis of Aboriginal Southeast Asians Molecular Biology and Evolution 23 12 2480 91 doi 10 1093 molbev msl124 PMID 16982817 Rieux Adrien Eriksson Anders Li Mingkun et al 2014 Improved Calibration of the Human Mitochondrial Clock Using Ancient Genomes Mol Biol Evol 31 10 2780 92 doi 10 1093 molbev msu222 PMC 4166928 PMID 25100861 Haplogroup A Ianlogan co uk Retrieved 2010 07 29 Haplogroup S Ianlogan co uk Retrieved 2010 07 29 Haplogroup X Ianlogan co uk Retrieved 2010 07 29 Haplogroup R Ianlogan co uk Retrieved 2010 07 29 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haplogroup N mtDNA Haplogroup N Mannis van Oven s mtDNA subtree N Spread of Haplogroup N from National Geographic Hudjashov G Kivisild T Underhill P A Endicott P Sanchez J J Lin A A Shen P Oefner P Renfrew C Villems R Forster P 2007 Revealing the prehistoric settlement of Australia by Y chromosome and mtDNA analysis Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 21 8726 30 Bibcode 2007PNAS 104 8726H doi 10 1073 pnas 0702928104 PMC 1885570 PMID 17496137 Katherine Borges The Haplogroup N mtDNA Study at Family Tree DNA General Ian Logan s Mitochondrial DNA Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haplogroup N mtDNA amp oldid 1160382242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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