Haplogroup K2b (P331), also known as MPS[3] is a human y-chromosome haplogroup that is thought to be less than 3,000 years younger than K, and less than 10,000 years younger than F, meaning it probably is around 50,000 years old, according to the age estimates of Tatiana Karafet et al. 2014.[2]
Haplogroup K2b (P331) | |
---|---|
Possible time of origin | About 3,000 years younger than K-M9 40,000-50,000 years old |
Possible place of origin | Probably East Asia[1] or Southeast Asia[2] |
Ancestor | K2 |
Descendants |
|
Defining mutations | P331, CTS2019/M1205, PF5990/L405, PF5969,[3][2] |
Basal paragroup K2b* has not been identified among living males but was found in Upper Paleolithic Tianyuan man from China.[4]
K2b1 (P397/P399) known previously as Haplogroup MS, and Haplogroup P (P-P295), also known as K2b2 are the only primary clades of K2b. The population geneticist Tatiana Karafet and other researchers (2014) point out that K2b1, its subclades and P* are virtually restricted geographically to South East Asia and Oceania.[2] Whereas, in a striking contrast, P1 (P-M45) and its primary subclades Q and R now make up "the most frequent haplogroup in Europe, the Americas, and Central Asia and South Asia". According to Karafet et al., the estimated dates for the branching of K, K2, K2b and P point to a "rapid diversification" within K2 "that likely occurred in Southeast Asia", with subsequent "westward expansions" of P*, P1, Q and R.[2]
According to geneticist Spencer Wells, haplogroup K originated in the Middle East or Central Asia, in the region of Iran or Pakistan.[5]
Phylogenetic structure
edit- K2b (P331), also known as MPS.
- K2b1 (P397, P399), similar to the previous Haplogroup MS.
- Haplogroup S (B254) also known as K2b1a.
- Haplogroup M (P256) also known as K2b1b.
- Haplogroup P (P-F5850)
- K2b1 (P397, P399), similar to the previous Haplogroup MS.
Distribution
editModern populations with living members of K2b1 all subclades), P* (P-P295*; K2b2*) and P2 (K2b2b) appear to be restricted to Oceania, South East Asia and Siberia.
Basal, un-mutated P1* (K2b2a*; P-M45*), in modern times, is distributed in isolated pockets, over a relatively wide area that includes Island South East Asia.
Some Negrito populations of South-East Asia carry next to noteworthy East Asian ancestry, very high levels of K2b at the subclade level. It is carried, for instance, by more than 83% of males among the Aeta (or Agta) people of the Philippines, in the form of K2b1 (60%), P* (P-P295*, a.k.a. K2b2*) and P2 (P-B253; K2b2b).
K2b1
editK2b1 is found in 83% of males of Papua New Guinea, and up to 60% in the Aeta people of the Philippines.[2] It is also found among other Melanesian populations, as well as indigenous Australians, and at lower levels amongst Polynesians.[2] It is also found in the Melanesian populations of Indonesia.
Major studies of indigenous Australian Y-DNA, published in 2014 and 2015, suggest that about 29% of indigenous Australian males belong to subclades of K2b1. That is, up to 27% indigenous Australian males carry haplogroup S1a1a1 (S-P308; previously known as K2b1a1 or K-P308),[2] and one study found that approximately 2.0% – i.e. 0.9% (11 individuals) of the sample in a study in which 45% of the total was deemed to be non-indigenous – belonged to haplogroup M1 (M-M4; also known as M-M186 and known previously as haplogroup K2b1d1). All of these males carrying M1 were Torres Strait Islanders.[6] (The other Y-DNA haplogroups found were: basal K2* [K-M526], C1b2b [M347; previously Haplogroup C4], and basal C* [M130].)
Population | K2b1 (including haplogroups M & S) |
---|---|
Papua New Guinea | 82.76% |
Maori | 03.82% (1.95% of those sampled, i.e. 49% of Maori males were deemed to have non-indigenous Y-DNA) |
Fiji | 60.75% |
Solomon Islands | 71.9% |
French Polynesia | 08% |
Vanuatu | 76.5% |
New Caledonia | |
Guam | 33.3% (small sample size) |
Samoa | 08.04% |
Kiribati | 00% (small sample size) |
Tonga | 20.69% |
Micronesia FDR | 66.67% |
Marshall Islands | 63.64% |
American Samoa | |
Northern Mariana Islands | |
Palau | 61.5% (small sample size) |
Cook Islands | 03.9% |
Wallis and Futuna | 26% |
Tuvalu | 36% |
Nauru | 28.6% (small sample size) |
Norfolk Island | |
Niue | 00% (small sample size) |
Tokelau | 50% (small sample size) |
Hawaii | 20% (small sample size from FTDNA) |
Aboriginal Australians | 29%[6] |
Timor | 25% |
Aeta | 60% |
Malaysia | 02.40% ( small sample size ) |
Flores | 35% |
Sulawesi | 11.3% |
Sulawesi | 00% |
East Indonesia (Lesser Sunda Islands) | 25.9% |
Java Indonesia | 00% |
Bali Indonesia | 00.9% |
Sumatra Indonesia | 00% |
Borneo Indonesia | 05.8% |
West Papua (Papua Province, Indonesia) | 52.6% |
West Papua (Papua Province, Indonesia) | 82.6% |
Sumba Indonesia | 25.2% |
Chukkese people Micronesia | 76.5% |
Pohnpeian people Micronesia | 70% (small sample size) |
P (K2b2)
editApart from the basal paragroup P* (K2b2), it has only one subclade: P1 (M45), also known as K2b2a – which is also the parent of the major haplogroups Q (K2b2a1) and R (K2b2a2).[2]
P (K2b2) descendant haplogroups Q (K2b2a1) and R (K2b2a2) is widely distributed among males of Native American, Central Asian, South Asian and Siberian ancestry.
Basal P* (K2b2*)
editP-P295* (sometimes known as "pre-P", before P-M45 was redesignated P1) is found among 28% of males among the Aeta, as well as in Timor at 10.8%, and one case may have been found in Papua New Guinea (Kaysar et al. 2006) although this has not been verified.[2]
Population | Rate of P* (%) | Notes |
---|---|---|
Papua New Guinea | 0.69 | assumed from Kayser et al. 2006, i.e. one P* found |
New Zealand | 0 | |
Fiji | 0 | |
Solomon Islands | 0 | |
French Polynesia | 0 | |
Vanuatu | 0 | |
New Caledonia | ||
Guam | 0 | |
Samoa | 0 | |
Kiribati | ||
Tonga | 0 | |
Federated States of Micronesia | 0 | |
Marshall Islands | 0 | |
American Samoa | ||
Northern Mariana Islands | ||
Palau | ||
Cook Islands | 0 | |
Wallis and Futuna | 0 | |
Tuvalu | 0 | |
Nauru | ||
Norfolk Island | ||
Niue | 0 | small sample size |
Tokelau | 0 | small sample size |
Hawaii | 0 | small sample size from FTDNA |
Australia | 0 | |
Timor | 10.8 | |
Aeta | 28 | |
Filipino Austronesian | 0 | |
Malay | 0 | |
Flores | 0 | |
Sulawesi | 0.6 | |
East Indonesia | 0 | |
Java Indonesia | 0 | |
Bali Indonesia | 0 | |
Sumatra Indonesia | 0 | |
Borneo Indonesia | 0 | |
West Papua Province | 0 | |
Papua Province | 0 | |
Sumba Indonesia | 3.2 |
P1 (K2b2a)
editP1 (M45/PF5962), also known as K2b2a, is hundreds of times more common than P* (K2b2; PxM45), as it includes haplogroups Q and R, is estimated as being 14,300 years younger than K2b.[2]
Many ethnic groups with high frequencies of P1 are located in Central Asia and Siberia: 35.4% among Tuvans, 28.3% among Altaian Kizhi,[7] and 35% among Nivkh males.
Modern South Asian populations also feature P1 at low to moderate frequencies.[8] In South Asia it is most frequent among the Muslims of Manipur (33%), but this may be due to a very small sample size (nine individuals). Cases of P1 (M45) reported in South Asia may be unresolved cases or R2 or Q.[8]
Population group (with ethnolinguistic affiliation) | Paper | N | Percentage | SNPs Tested | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tuvinian (Turkic) | Darenko 2005 | 113 | 35.40 | P-M45 | |
Nivkh (isolate) | Lell 2001 | 17 | 35 | P-M45 | |
Altai-Kizhi (Altaians) (Turkic) | Darenko 2005 | 92 | 28.3 | P-M45 | |
Todjin (Turkic) | Darenko 2005 | 36 | 22.2 | P-M45 | |
Chukchi (Chukotkan) | Lell 2001 | 24 | 20.8 | P-M45 | |
Koryak (Chukotkan) | Lell 2001 | 27 | 18.5 | P-M45 | |
Yupik (Eskimo-Aleut) | Lell 2001 | 33 | 18.2 | P-M45 | |
Uighur (Turkic) | Xue 2006 | 70 | 17.1 | P-M45 | |
Kalmyk (Mongolic) | Darenko 2005 | 68 | 11.8 | P-M45 | |
Turkmen (Turkic) | Wells 2001 | 30 | 10 | P-M45 | |
Soyot (Turkic) | Darenko 2005 | 34 | 8.8 | P-M45 | |
Uriankhai (Mongolic) | Katoh 2004 | 60 | 8.3 | P-M45 | |
Khakas (Turkic) | Darenko 2005 | 53 | 7.6 | P-M45 | |
Kazakh (Turkic) | Wells 2001 | 54 | 5.6 | P-M45 | |
Uzbek (Turkic) | Wells 2001 | 366 | 5.5 | P-M45 | |
Khasi-Khmuic (Austro-Asiatic) | Reddy 2009 | 353 | 5.40 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
Mundari (Austro-Asiatic) | Reddy 2009 | 64 | 10.90 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
Nicobarese (Mon-Khmer) | Reddy 2009 | 11 | 0.00 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
Southeast Asia (Austro-Asiatic) | Reddy 2009 | 257 | 1.60 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
Garo (Tibeto-Burman) | Reddy 2009 | 71 | 1.40 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
India (Tibeto-Burman) | Reddy 2009 | 226 | 3.10 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
East Asia (Tibeto-Burman) | Reddy 2009 | 214 | 0.00 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
Eastern India (Indo-European) | Reddy 2009 | 54 | 18.50 | P-M45(xM173) § | |
Iran (Southern Talysh) | Nasidze 2009 | 50 | 4.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Azerbaijan (Northern Talysh) | Nasidze 2009 | 40 | 5.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Mazandarani (Iranian) | Nasidze 2009 | 50 | 4.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Gilaki (Iranian) | Nasidze 2009 | 50 | 0.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Tehran (Iranian) | Nasidze 2004 | 80 | 4.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Isfahan (Iranian) | Nasidze 2004 | 50 | 6.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Bakhtiari (Iranian) | Nasidze 2008 | 53 | 2.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Iranian Arabs (Arabic) | Nasidze 2008 | 47 | 2.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
North Iran (Iranian) | Regueiro 2006 | 33 | 9.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
South Iran (Iranian) | Regueiro 2006 | 117 | 3.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
South Caucacus (Georgian) | Nasidze and Stoneking 2001 | 77 | 3.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
South Caucacus (Armenian) | Nasidze and Stoneking 2001 | 100 | 2.00 | P-M45(xM124,xM173) | |
Hvar (Croatian) | Barać et al. 2003 | 14 | |||
Korčula (Croatian) | Barać et al. 2003 | 6 |
§ These may include members of haplogroup R2.
Population group | N | P (xQ,xR) | Q | R | Paper | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Count | % | Count | % | Count | % | |||
Gope | 16 | 1 | 6.4 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Oriya Brahmin | 24 | 1 | 4.2 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Mahishya | 17 | 3 | 17.6 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Bhumij | 15 | 2 | 13.3 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Saora | 13 | 3 | 23.1 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Nepali | 7 | 2 | 28.6 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Muslims of Manipur | 9 | 3 | 33.3 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Himachal Pradesh Rajput | 15 | 1 | 6.7 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Lambadi | 18 | 4 | 22.2 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Gujarati Patel | 9 | 2 | 22.2 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Katkari | 19 | 1 | 5.3 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Madia Gond | 14 | 1 | 7.1 | Sahoo 2006 | ||||
Kamma Chowdary | 15 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6.7 | 12 | 80 | Sahoo 2006 |
See also
edit- Ancient populations haplogroups are assumed from small ancient sample sizes.
- † Stands for assumed extinction (no living sample of the same haplogroup)
- [2] Entire Phylogeny except for Hg X + distribution of K2b1 clades K2* clades and K2c+K2d, as well as P(xm45)
- [9][10][11][12] Ancient dna.
- [13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] Modern Populations+Ancient Basques
- [3][25] y-dna haplogroup X.
Notes
editAssuming B70 ky for the TMRCA of M168 chromosomes,10 we estimate the interval of time between the diversification of K-M9 and that of K-P331 to be <3 ky. This rapid diversification has also been assessed using whole Y-chromosome sequence data.22 In addition, we estimate the total time between the common ancestor of K-M9 and that of P-P295 to be <5 ky, and the time between the common ancestor P-P295 and that of P-P27 to be 12.3 ky (95% CI: 6.6–20 ky).[2]
References
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- ^ Wells, Spencer (20 November 2007). Deep Ancestry: The Landmark DNA Quest to Decipher Our Distant Past. National Geographic Books. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-4262-0211-7. "Given the widespread distribution of K, it probably arose somewhere in the Middle East or Central Asia, perhaps in the region of Iran or Pakistan."
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