Haplogroup C (mtDNA)
Haplogroup C | |
---|---|
Possible time of origin | 36,473.3 (SD 7392.0) years[1] |
Coalescence age | 27,370 (95% CI 19,550 <-> 35,440) ybp[2] 23,912.2 (SD 4780.8) years[1] 21,700 (95% CI 19,200 <-> 24,400) ybp[3] |
Possible place of origin | East Asia[4] |
Ancestor | CZ |
Descendants | C1, C4, C5, C7 |
Defining mutations | 489 10400 14783 15043[5] |
In human mitochondrial genetics, Haplogroup C is a human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup.
Origin
[edit]Haplogroup C is believed to have arisen in East Asia[4] some 24,000 years before present. It is a descendant of the haplogroup M. Haplogroup C shares six mutations downstream of the MRCA of haplogroup M with haplogroup Z and five mutations downstream of the MRCA of haplogroup M with other members of haplogroup M8. This macro-haplogroup is known as haplogroup M8'CZ or simply as haplogroup M8.
Distribution
[edit]Haplogroup C is found in Northeast Asia[6] (including Siberia) and the Americas. In Eurasia, Haplogroup C is especially frequent among populations of arctic Siberia, such as Nganasans, Dolgans, Yakuts, Evenks, Evens, Yukaghirs, and Koryaks.[7][8][9] Haplogroup C is one of five mtDNA haplogroups found in the indigenous peoples of the Americas,[6] the others being A, B, D, and X. The subclades C1b, C1c, C1d, and C4c are found in the first people of the Americas. C1a is found only in Asia.
In 2010, Icelandic researchers discovered C1e lineage in their home country, estimating an introduction date of year 1700 AD or earlier, indicating a possible introduction during the Viking expeditions to the Americas. A Native American origin for this C1e lineage is likely, but the researchers note that a European or Asian one cannot be ruled out.[10][11][12]
In 2014, a study discovered a new mtDNA subclade C1f from the remains of 3 people found in north-western Russia and dated to 7,500 years ago. It has not been detected in modern populations. The study proposed the hypothesis that the sister C1e and C1f subclades had split early from the most recent common ancestor of the C1 clade and had evolved independently. Subclade C1e had a northern European origin. Iceland was settled by the Vikings 1,130 years ago and they had raided heavily into western Russia, where the sister subclade C1f is now known to have resided. They proposed that both subclades were brought to Iceland through the Vikings, however C1e went extinct on mainland northern Europe due to population turnover and its small representation, and subclade C1f went extinct completely.[13]
In 2015, a study conducted in the Aconcagua mummy identified its mtDNA lineage belongs to the subclade C1bi, which contains 10 distinct mutations from C1b.[14]
Table of Frequencies by ethnic group
[edit]Population | Frequency | Count | Source | Subtypes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Evenks (Stony Tunguska) | 0.769 | 39 | Duggan 2013 | C4a2=7, C4a1c=6, C4b1=5, C5d1=4, C4b=3, C4b3=3, C4a1c1a=1, C5b1b=1 |
Evenk | 0.718 | 71 | Starikovskaya 2005 | C(xC1, C5)=41, C5=10 |
Yukaghir | 0.670 | 100 | Volodko 2008 | C(xC1, C5)=54, C5=13 |
Evenk (East) | 0.644 | 45 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=17, C5=12 |
Tofalar | 0.621 | 58 | Derenko 2003 | C(xC1, C5)=31, C5=5 |
Evens (Sebjan) | 0.556 | 18 | Duggan 2013 | C4b=6, C4a1c=3, C5b1b=1 |
Yukaghirs | 0.550 | 20 | Duggan 2013 | C4a1c=4, C4b3a=2, C4b7=2, C4a2=1, C5a2=1, C5d1=1 |
Yukaghirs (Yakutia) | 0.545 | 22 | Fedorova 2013 | C4b3a=5, C5d1=3, C4a1c=1, C4a2=1, C4b1=1, C5a2a=1 |
Evens (Tompo) | 0.519 | 27 | Duggan 2013 | C4a1c=6, C4a2=3, C4b=2, C4b1=2, C5d1=1 |
Nganasans | 0.513 | 39 | Volodko 2008 | C(xC1, C5)=12, C5=8 |
Tozhu Tuvans | 0.479 | 48 | Derenko 2003 | C(xC1, C5)=16, C5=7 |
Evenks (Yakutia) | 0.472 | 125 | Fedorova 2013 | C4b1=13, C4a1c=11, C4b9=9, C4a2=8, C4b=5, C5b1b=4, C5a2=3, C5d1=2, C4a1=1, C4a1d=1, C4b3a=1, C5a1=1 |
Tuvans | 0.472 | 231 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=88, C5=21 |
Yakut | 0.469 | 254 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=95, C5=24 |
Evens (Berezovka) | 0.467 | 15 | Duggan 2013 | C4b3a=4, C4b=1, C4b1=1, C4b7=1 |
Evenk (West) | 0.466 | 73 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=29, C5=5 |
Evenks (Taimyr) | 0.458 | 24 | Duggan 2013 | C4a1c=5, C4b1=4, C4a1c1a=1, C4a2=1 |
Yakut (Central) | 0.457 | 164 | Fedorova 2013 | C4a1c=16, C4a2=14, C5b1b=13, C4b1=8, C4a1d=7, C4b=4, C4b1a=3, C5a1=3, C4a1=2, C5b1a=2, C4b3a=1, C5a2=1, C7a1c=1 |
Evens (Yakutia) | 0.457 | 105 | Fedorova 2013 | C4a1c=15, C5d1=11, C4a2=4, C4b3a=3, C4b1=2, C4b7=2, C4b9=2, C4b=2, C5a1=2, C7a1c=2, C4b1a=1, C4b2=1, C5a2a=1 |
Evenks (Nyukzha) | 0.413 | 46 | Fedorova 2013 | C4a2=10, C4b1=3, C4a1c=2, C4a1d=1, C4b1a=1, C5a2=1, C7a1c=1 |
Yakut (Northern) | 0.405 | 148 | Fedorova 2013 | C4a1c=17, C4b1=16, C4a2=11, C5b1a=4, C5b1b=4, C4b9=3, C4b=2, C5a1=2, C5d1=1 |
Koryaks | 0.400 | 15 | Duggan 2013 | C4b=3, C5a2=3 |
Dolgans | 0.390 | 154 | Fedorova 2013 | C4a1c=33, C4b1=9, C5b1b=5, C4b3a=3, C4a2=2, C4b1a=2, C5b1a=2, C4b8=1, C4b=1, C5d1=1, C7a1c=1 |
Even | 0.377 | 191 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=50, C5=22 |
Koryak | 0.368 | 182 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=39, C5=28 |
Yakut (Vilyuy) | 0.360 | 111 | Fedorova 2013 | C4a1c=14, C4a2=10, C4b=5, C4b1=4, C4b1a=2, C5a2=2, C5b1b=2, C4a1=1 |
Evens (Kamchatka) | 0.333 | 39 | Duggan 2013 | C4b1=6, C4b3a=3, C4a1c=2, C5a2=1, C5d1=1 |
Altai-Kizhi | 0.322 | 90 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=21, C5=8 |
Chuvantsi | 0.313 | 32 | Volodko 2008 | C(xC1, C5)=10 |
Oroqen | 0.295 | 44 | Kong 2003 | C(xC1, C5)=9, C5=4 |
Teleut | 0.283 | 53 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=11, C5=4 |
Evens (Sakkyryyr) | 0.261 | 23 | Duggan 2013 | C4a1c=2, C4b=2, C4a1d=1, C4b1=1 |
Udegey | 0.226 | 31 | Duggan 2013 | C4b1=6, C4a1d=1 |
Mongolian (Ulaanbaatar) | 0.213 | 47 | Jin 2009 | C=10 |
Buryat | 0.212 | 419 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=66, C1=3, C5=20 |
Khakassian | 0.208 | 110 | Derenko 2003 | C(xC1, C5)=28, C5=2 |
Barghut | 0.201 | 149 | [citation needed] | C4a1a1=6, C4a1a2=3, C4a1b2=3, C4a2a1=2, C4b1a=2, C4b1=2, C4=2, C5b=2, C4a1a=1, C4a1a1a2=1, C4a1a2a2=1, C4a2a2=1, C5a1=1, C5a2=1, C5b1a=1, C7=1 |
Tubalar | 0.194 | 72 | Starikovskaya 2005 | C(xC1, C5)=12, C5=2 |
Altaian | 0.191 | 110 | Derenko 2003 | C(xC1, C5)=21 |
Evenks (Iengra) | 0.190 | 21 | Duggan 2013 | C4a2=2, C4b1=1, C5a2=1 |
Udege | 0.174 | 46 | Starikovskaya 2005 | C(xC1, C5)=8 |
Mongolian (Ulaanbaatar) | 0.170 | 47 | Derenko 2007 | C4=4, C*(xC1,C4,C5)=3, C5=1 |
Telenghit | 0.169 | 71 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=10, C5=2 |
Mongolian | 0.153 | 150 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=18, C1=2, C5=3 |
Negidal | 0.152 | 33 | Starikovskaya 2005 | C(xC1, C5)=3, C5=2 |
Kyrgyz (Kyzylsu) | 0.145 | 138 | [citation needed] | C=20 |
Kyrgyz | 0.140 | 200 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=18, C1=1, C5=9 |
Ulch | 0.138 | 87 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=6, C1=1, C5=5 |
Turkmen | 0.135 | 178 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=14, C5=10 |
Chukchi | 0.132 | 417 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=27 C5=28 |
Kazakh (Xinjiang) | 0.132 | 53 | Yao 2004 | C(xC1, C5)=5 C5=2 |
Itelmen | 0.130 | 46 | Schurr 1999 | C5=6 |
Shor | 0.122 | 82 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=9 C5=1 |
Orok | 0.115 | 61 | Bermisheva 2005 | C1=7 |
Kyrgyz (Taxkorgan) | 0.103 | 68 | Peng 2017 | C4=6, C5=1 |
Thai | 0.100 | 40 | Jin 2009 | C=4 |
Nanai | 0.094 | 85 | Tamm 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=5, C1=1, C5=2 |
Kazakh | 0.086 | 511 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=32, C1=4, C5=8 |
Mongolian (Inner Mongolia) | 0.083 | 97 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=5 |
Altaian (Kazakhstan) | 0.082 | 98 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=8 |
Kyrgyz (Artux) | 0.074 | 54 | Peng 2017 | C4=4 |
Tajik | 0.073 | 82 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1, C5)=6 |
Sarikoli | 0.070 | 86 | Peng 2017 | C4a1a+A14878G=2, C4a1=2, C4b1=1, C4+T152C!+T4742C+T8602C=1 |
Daur | 0.066 | 45 | Kong 2003 | C(xC1, C5)=2, C1=1 |
Uyghur (Xinjiang) | 0.064 | 47 | Yao 2004 | C(xC1, C5)=3 |
Uzbek | 0.061 | 130 | Quintana-Murci 2004 | C(xC1, C5)=6, C5=2 |
Vietnamese | 0.048 | 42 | Jin 2009 | C=2 |
Han Chinese | 0.045 | 1930 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=72, C5=15 |
Thai | 0.034 | 552 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=19 |
Korean (mostly Ulsan) | 0.030 | 1094 | [citation needed] | C=33 |
Manchu | 0.025 | 40 | Jin 2009 | C=1 |
Korean | 0.024 | 694 | [citation needed] | C=17 |
Korean (China) | 0.020 | 51 | Jin 2009 | C=1 |
Korean (Korea) | 0.016 | 185 | Jin 2009 | C=3 |
Korean | 0.015 | 537 | Tanaka 2004 | C5=4, C(xC1,C5)=4 |
Korean | 0.010 | 103 | Derenko 2007 | C(xC1,C4,C5)=1 |
Eskimo | 0.008 | 254 | [citation needed] | C(xC1, C5)=2 |
Japanese | 0.005 | 1312 | Tanaka 2004 | C1=4, C5=1, C(xC1,C5)=1 |
Japanese (Tokyo) | 0.000 | 118 | Zheng 2011 | - |
Ainu | 0.000 | 51 | [citation needed] | - |
Nivkh | 0.000 | 38 | Duggan 2013 | - |
Han (Beijing) | 0.000 | 40 | Jin 2009 | - |
Nivkh | 0.000 | 56 | Starikovskaya 2005 | - |
Subclades
[edit]Tree
[edit]This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup C subclades is based on the paper by Mannis van Oven and Manfred Kayser Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation[5] and subsequent published research.
- CZ
- C - China (Mongol from Chifeng[15]), Korea, Russia (Bashkortostan[3]), India
- C1 - Paraguay (Alto Parana[16]), ancient DNA from specimen I0061 (from Yuzhniy Oleni Ostrov, Lake Onega, Russia, 7450 - 6950 ybp)
- C1a
- C1b
- C1b*
- C1b1
- C1b1*
- C1b1a
- C1b1a* – Mexican American
- C1b1a1 – Mexican American
- C1b1b – Native American, Mexican American
- C1b2
- C1b2* – Peru, Paraguay
- C1b2a – Peru
- C1b2b – Colombia
- C1b2c
- C1b2c* – USA, Puerto Rico, Paraguay, Spain
- C1b2c1 – Paraguay
- C1b3
- C1b3* – Peru
- C1b3a - Indonesia (Java, Borneo, Sumatera, Papua Nugini dan Sulawesi)
- C1b3a* – Peru
- C1b3a1 – Argentina
- C1b4 – Ecuador, Peru, USA
- C1b5
- C1c
- C1c1
- C1c2
- C1d – Argentina (Buenos Aires[22]), Colombia (Boyacá[22]), Mexico (Tamaulipas,[22] Guanajuato,[22] Chihuahua,[22] etc.), United States (Mexican Americans[23]), Canada (Shuswap[24])
- C1e – Iceland
- C1f – Pamiri Tajik (Gorno-Badakhshan),[25][3] India (Marathi),[3] Scotland, Italy, Mesolithic NW Russia
- C1g – Mesolithic NW Russia (Karelia)[26]
- C4 – Upper Palaeolithic (14050 - 13770 ybp) Ust-Kyakhta (Buryatia), Late Neolithic-Bronze Age Irkutsk Oblast,[27] Late Neolithic-Iron Age Yakutia,[27] Tubalar (Ederbes), Todzhin (Toora-Hem,[28] Iiy,[28] Adir-Kezhig[28]), Yukaghir (Andrushkino[28]), Yukaghir/Chuvan (Markovo[28]), Russian,[2] Myanmar
- C4a'b'c - Irkutsk Oblast (6815 ybp[3]), India (Jenu Kuruba[29])
- C4a – China (Guangdong,[3] Han from Beijing)
- C4a1 – Mongol from Chifeng and Hulunbuir,[15] Tashkurgan (Kyrgyz, Sarikoli, Wakhi),[25] Czech Republic,[citation needed] Denmark[citation needed]
- C4a1a – Korea,[3] China, Uyghur, Buryat (South Siberia[2]), Denmark, Sweden, France, Scotland, Canada
- C4a1a1
- C-T195C! – Ireland, Scotland, England, USA, Hungary (Szeged region[31]), Poland, Belarus,[citation needed] Russia (Russian,[2] Buryat), Turkey, Pakistan (Hazara), India (Jammu and Kashmir), China (Bargut and Mongol in Inner Mongolia, etc.), Korea
- C4a1a2 – China
- C4a1a2a – China (Han from Ili, Han from Henan, etc.)
- C4a1a2b
- C4a1a2b1 - China
- C4a1a2b2 - Uyghur
- C4a1a3 – Bronze Age Irkutsk Oblast (Ust'-Belaya, Khaptsagai, Silinskij, Chastaja Padi), Russian (Kemerovo Oblast[3]), Koryak,[28] Yukaghir,[7][8] Yakut,[8] Evenk (Nyukzha,[8] Chumikan,[28] Nelkan/Dzhigda[28]), Even (Sakkyryyr,[8] Sebjan,[8] Tompo,[8] Markovo,[28] Kamchatka[8]), Udinsk Buryat (Kushun[28]), Todzhin (Toora-Hem,[28] Adir-Kezhig[28]), Altai Kizhi,[2] Iran (Qashqai[32]), Sweden
- C4a1a4 – Buryat,[2] Kazakhstan
- C4a1a2 – China
- C4a1a5 – Teleut,[2] Ladakh
- C4a1a6
- C4a1a6a - Russia (Bashkortostan, Khamnigan[2]), Kyrgyzstan (Kyrgyz[21]), Inner Mongolia (Bargut,[2] Buryat[citation needed])
- C4a1a6b - Buryat (South Siberia,[2] Inner Mongolia[citation needed]), Uyghur
- C4a1a7 - Denmark[36]
- C4a1b – China, Thailand (Palaung[37])
- C4a1c - Russia (Bashkortostan,[citation needed] Adygei), Iran (Azerbaijanian[32]), China (Xibo, Mongol from Tianjin[15])
- C4a1a – Korea,[3] China, Uyghur, Buryat (South Siberia[2]), Denmark, Sweden, France, Scotland, Canada
- C4a2
- C4a2a – Yakut,[8] Evenk (Chumikan[28])
- C4a2a1 – Bronze Age (2275 - 2040 cal BC) Irkutsk Oblast (specimen irk076 from burial 3 at the Shamanka 2 site, South Baikal),[27][3] Shor,[2] Chelkan, Teleut, Altai Kizhi,[2] Yakut,[8][18] Kazakh, Ket,[38][39][28] Evenk (Stony Tunguska,[8] Taimyr[8]), Buryat (Irkutsk Oblast,[citation needed] Inner Mongolia[citation needed]), China, Korea
- C4a2a1a – Yukaghir,[7][8] Yakut,[8] Evenk (Nyukzha,[8] Iyengra,[8] Nelkan/Dzhigda[28]), Even (Tompo[8])
- C4a2a1b – Evenk[40][17] (Nyukzha[8]), Yakut[8]
- C4a2a1b1 - Evenk (Nyukzha[8])
- C4a2a1c - China (Zhejiang,[3] Uyghurs[3]), Buryat,[2] Todzhin (Iiy[28]), Karanogay (Dagestan[3])
- C4a2a1d - Uyghurs
- C4a2a1e - Bargut (Inner Mongolia[2]), Buryat (Irkutsk Oblast[citation needed])
- C4a2a1f - Buryat (South Siberia,[2] Irkutsk Oblast[citation needed])
- C4a2a1g - Ket[28]
- C4a2a1 – Bronze Age (2275 - 2040 cal BC) Irkutsk Oblast (specimen irk076 from burial 3 at the Shamanka 2 site, South Baikal),[27][3] Shor,[2] Chelkan, Teleut, Altai Kizhi,[2] Yakut,[8][18] Kazakh, Ket,[38][39][28] Evenk (Stony Tunguska,[8] Taimyr[8]), Buryat (Irkutsk Oblast,[citation needed] Inner Mongolia[citation needed]), China, Korea
- C4a2b – Tibet, Korea[3]
- C4a2b1 – Wancho[29]
- C4a2b2 – China (Han from Beijing)
- C4a2b2a – Tibet (Sherpa)[citation needed]
- C4a2c – Bargut (Inner Mongolia)[2]
- C4a2a – Yakut,[8] Evenk (Chumikan[28])
- C4a1 – Mongol from Chifeng and Hulunbuir,[15] Tashkurgan (Kyrgyz, Sarikoli, Wakhi),[25] Czech Republic,[citation needed] Denmark[citation needed]
- C4b – Mongol from Jilin and Hulunbuir,[15] Yukaghir,[7] Altai Kizhi,[2] Ukraine, Slovakia
- C4c – Ijka[41]
- C4c1 – Sioux (Carson County of South Dakota),[citation needed] Shuswap,[24] Canada, USA, France, Spain
- C4c1a – Cherokee (Flint District of Oklahoma)[42]
- C4c1b – Chippewa (Trempealeau in Wisconsin),[citation needed] Ottawa or Chippewa (Sault Saint Marie, Chippewa County, Michigan),[citation needed] Canada
- C4c2 – Métis (Red River, Manitoba),[citation needed] USA
- C4c1 – Sioux (Carson County of South Dakota),[citation needed] Shuswap,[24] Canada, USA, France, Spain
- C4a – China (Guangdong,[3] Han from Beijing)
- C4-T152C! – Russia (Bashkortostan[3]), England[citation needed]
- C4-T152C!-A12780G - Uyghur
- C4d – Turkey, Tibet (Chamdo, Nyingchi, Shannan, Lhoba[citation needed]), Thailand (Khon Mueang from Chiang Mai Province[37]), Han from Beijing, Mongol from Tongliao[15]
- C4-T152C!-T4742C - Altai Republic (ancient DNA), Uyghur
- C4-T152C!-T4742C-T16093C - Kyrgyz (Kyrgyzstan[21]), Tibet (Nyingchi)
- C4-T152C!-T4742C-T8602C - Sarikoli (Tashkurgan),[25] Burusho (Pakistan[19])
- C4-T152C!-T4742C-T8602C-G11176A - Pamiri (Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region of Tajikistan[25])
- C4e – Teleut,[2] Shor[2]
- C4-T152C!-A12780G - Uyghur
- C4a'b'c - Irkutsk Oblast (6815 ybp[3]), India (Jenu Kuruba[29])
- C5 – India
- C5a – Azeri
- C5a1 – Mongol (Bayannur, Hohhot, Chifeng[15]), Bargut (Inner Mongolia),[2] Buryat (Irkutsk Oblast[citation needed]), Xibo (HGDP), Kazakhstan
- C5a1a - Khanty,[18] Altai Kizhi[2]
- C5a1b - Even (Severo-Evensk district[2]), Ulchi[17]
- C5a1c - Yakut, Khamnigan (South Siberia[2])
- C5a1d - Buryat (South Siberia,[2] Inner Mongolia[citation needed])
- C5a1e - Uyghur
- C5a1f - Uyghur
- C5a2
- C5a1 – Mongol (Bayannur, Hohhot, Chifeng[15]), Bargut (Inner Mongolia),[2] Buryat (Irkutsk Oblast[citation needed]), Xibo (HGDP), Kazakhstan
- C5b – Poland[2][43]
- C5b1 – Mongol (Bayannur, Shanxi[15]), Buryat (South Siberia[2]), Tofalar,[34] Todjin,[34] Tuvan,[34] Sojot,[34] Ladakh, Japan
- C5b1a – Evenk (Central Siberia[2])
- C5b1a1 – Nganasan,[17] Yakut,[8] Buryat (South Siberia[2]), Khamnigan (South Siberia[2]), Kyrgyz (Tashkurgan[25])
- C5b1a2 - Altai Kizhi (South Siberia[2]), Irtysh-Barabinsk Tatar (Novosibirsk Oblast)
- C5b1b – Khakas[34]
- C5b1b* – Buryat (South Siberia[2]), Russia[citation needed] (Chechen Republic[3]), Bulgaria[citation needed] (Turk in Dobrich[3])
- C5b1b1 – Yakut[8]
- C5b1b2 - Uyghur
- C5b1a – Evenk (Central Siberia[2])
- C5b1 – Mongol (Bayannur, Shanxi[15]), Buryat (South Siberia[2]), Tofalar,[34] Todjin,[34] Tuvan,[34] Sojot,[34] Ladakh, Japan
- C5-T16093C – Japan (Aichi), Korea, Han (Beijing)
- C5a – Azeri
- C7 – South Korea,[2] China,[44] Taiwan (Hakka), Thailand (Khon Mueang in Chiang Rai Province, Chiang Mai Province, and Lamphun Province[37]), Vietnam (Kinh, Tay, Jarai)
- C7a – Han (Beijing, Yunnan, Denver, etc.),[45] Uyghur, Taiwan (Paiwan, Minnan), Lahu, Thailand (incl. Urak Lawoi, Lao Isan in Chaiyaphum Province, Khon Mueang in Lamphun Province, Khon Mueang in Lampang Province, Kaleun in Nakhon Phanom Province, Black Tai in Loei Province, Phuan in Suphan Buri Province[37]), Vietnam (Hani, Yao, Gelao)
- C7a1 – China, Mongol (Alxa[15]), Taiwan (Makatao), USA (Han Chinese in Denver), Korea
- C7a1a – Thailand (Mon in Lopburi Province[37])
- C7a1b – Northern Thailand (Tai Lue[46]), Vietnam (Nung)
- C7a1c – Uyghurs, Mongol (Hebei, Tongliao, Hinggan, Hulunbuir[15]), Chinese (Fengcheng,[47] Shandong,[3] Fujian,[3] Taixing, etc.), Taiwan, Korea,[3] Vietnam
- C7a1d – Wancho[29]
- C7a1f – Thailand (Karen)
- C7a1f1 – Thailand (Karen, Shan, Khon Mueang from Mae Hong Son Province, Mon from Kanchanaburi Province)
- C7a1f1a – Thailand (S'gaw Karen, Khon Mueang in Chiang Rai Province[37])
- C7a1f1 – Thailand (Karen, Shan, Khon Mueang from Mae Hong Son Province, Mon from Kanchanaburi Province)
- C7a2 – China,[48] Dai, Laos (Lao in Luang Prabang[37]), Thailand (Khon Mueang in Chiang Mai Province, Khon Mueang in Chiang Rai Province, Lao Isan in Roi Et Province, Phutai in Sakon Nakhon Province, Mon in Nakhon Ratchasima Province[37]), Myanmar (Yangon)
- C7a3
- C7a4
- C7a5
- C7a6
- C7a1 – China, Mongol (Alxa[15]), Taiwan (Makatao), USA (Han Chinese in Denver), Korea
- C7-A16051G – Bargut (Inner Mongolia)[2]
- C7b – Gallong,[29] Naxi, Ukraine, Moldova, Austria
- C7c – Korea
- C7d – Taiwan (Hakka), Vietnam (Vietnamese), Thailand (Khon Mueang in Mae Hong Son Province, Lao Isan in Roi Et Province), Cambodia (Kampong Cham)
- C7e – Cambodia (Takéo), Thailand (Khmer in Surin Province)
- C7a – Han (Beijing, Yunnan, Denver, etc.),[45] Uyghur, Taiwan (Paiwan, Minnan), Lahu, Thailand (incl. Urak Lawoi, Lao Isan in Chaiyaphum Province, Khon Mueang in Lamphun Province, Khon Mueang in Lampang Province, Kaleun in Nakhon Phanom Province, Black Tai in Loei Province, Phuan in Suphan Buri Province[37]), Vietnam (Hani, Yao, Gelao)
- C1 - Paraguay (Alto Parana[16]), ancient DNA from specimen I0061 (from Yuzhniy Oleni Ostrov, Lake Onega, Russia, 7450 - 6950 ybp)
- C - China (Mongol from Chifeng[15]), Korea, Russia (Bashkortostan[3]), India
Popular culture
[edit]- In his popular book The Seven Daughters of Eve, Bryan Sykes named the originator of this mtDNA haplogroup Chochmingwu.
- Cellist Yo-Yo Ma belongs to the mtDNA haplogroup C.[50]
- Actor and film producer Adrian Grenier carries haplogroup C1b2.[51]
See also
[edit]- Genealogical DNA test
- Genetic genealogy
- Human mitochondrial genetics
- Population genetics
- Human mitochondrial DNA haplogroups
- Indigenous American genetic studies
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]- ^ a b Behar et al., 2012b
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg Derenko,M., Malyarchuk,B., Grzybowski,T., Denisova,G., Rogalla,U., Perkova,M., Dambueva,I., and Zakharov,I., "Origin and post-glacial dispersal of mitochondrial DNA haplogroups C and D in northern Asia." PLoS ONE 5 (12), E15214 (2010).
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s YFull MTree 1.02.7045 (as of January 11, 2021)
- ^ a b Derenko, Miroslava; Malyarchuk, Boris; Grzybowski, Tomasz; Denisova, Galina; Rogalla, Urszula; Perkova, Maria; Dambueva, Irina; Zakharov, Ilia (2010). "Origin and Post-Glacial Dispersal of Mitochondrial DNA Haplogroups C and D in Northern Asia". PLOS ONE. 5 (12): e15214. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...515214D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0015214. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3006427. PMID 21203537."More than a half of the northern Asian pool of mtDNA is fragmented into a number of subclades of haplogroups C and D, two of the most frequent haplogroups throughout northern, eastern, central Asia and America. Previous studies have proposed that haplogroups C and D originated around 30–50 kya in eastern Asia, from where they subsequently expanded northwards to southern Siberia, and further deep into northern Asia and the Americas, and westwards along the Steppe Belt extending from Manchuria to Europe [14], [15]. It has been also shown that haplogroups C and D were strongly involved in the late-glacial expansions from southern China to northeastern India [16]. In addition, because of their high frequency and wide distribution, haplogroups C and D most likely participated in all subsequent episodes of putative gene flow in northern Eurasia. These include (i) the Paleolithic colonization of Siberia that is associated with the development of macroblade industries (40–30 kya), (ii) further recolonization and possible replacement of early Siberians by microblade-making human populations from the Lake Baikal, Yenisei River, and Lena River basin regions (20 kya), (iii) appearance of pottery-making Neolithic tradition in the forest-steppe belt of northern Eurasia starting at about 14.5 kya and its expanding into the East European Plane (7 kya), (iv) the Neolithic dispersal of agriculture in eastern Asia, (v) the expansion of the Afanasievo and Andronovo cultures (5–3 kya), and (vi) more recent events of gene flow to eastern and central Europe. "
- ^ 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.
- ^ a b Haplogroup C.
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- Volodko, Natalia V.; Starikovskaya, Elena B.; Mazunin, Ilya O.; Eltsov, Nikolai P.; Naidenko, Polina V.; Wallace, Douglas C.; Sukernik, Rem I. (May 2008). "Mitochondrial Genome Diversity in Arctic Siberians, with Particular Reference to the Evolutionary History of Beringia and Pleistocenic Peopling of the Americas". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 82 (5): 1084–1100. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2008.03.019. PMC 2427195. PMID 18452887.
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External links
[edit]- General
- Ian Logan's Mitochondrial DNA Site
- Mannis van Oven's Phylotree
- Haplogroup C
- YFull MTree's Haplogroup C
- MITOMAP's Haplogroup C
- FamilyTreeDNA's mtDNA Haplotree: Haplogroup C
- Spread of Haplogroup C, from National Geographic