The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup L3E3A
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup L3E3A is a downstream subclade of L3e3 (itself a branch of L3e), a maternal lineage that emerged in West/Central Africa during the Holocene. Based on the phylogenetic position below L3e3 and patterns of geographic distribution, L3E3A likely arose after the initial diversification of L3e lineages, probably within the last ~1,000–4,000 years (we estimate ~2.5 kya for L3E3A). Its emergence reflects continued maternal-line differentiation in sub-Saharan Africa during the mid-to-late Holocene, a period marked by increased mobility, local expansions, and the development and spread of agricultural and ironworking societies.
Subclades
As a fine-scale subclade of L3e3, L3E3A may itself contain additional minor branches identified in regional population surveys and aDNA databases. Published population surveys and targeted sequencing occasionally resolve multiple internal branches within named L3e3 subclades; however, the deepest structure and naming of sub-subclades depend on the density of complete mitogenomes. L3E3A should be considered a diagnostically defined maternal lineage within the broader L3e3 clade and may include geographically structured lineages linked to particular West/Central African populations.
Geographical Distribution
L3E3A shows a predominantly West and Central African distribution with moderate representation across parts of Southern and Eastern Africa due to the historical expansion of Bantu-speaking groups. It appears at varying frequencies among West African populations such as Yoruba and other groups of Nigeria and Ghana, among Central African rainforest populations (including some Pygmy groups), and across Bantu-speaking communities in Central, Southern and parts of East Africa. Low-frequency occurrences are seen in North Africa and the Near East due to historical trans-Saharan and later contacts, and the lineage is also found in African-descended populations in the Americas and the Caribbean as a result of the transatlantic slave trade. L3E3A has been observed in several ancient DNA samples (six entries in the referenced database), supporting its presence in archaeological contexts spanning the late Holocene.
Historical and Cultural Significance
The temporal and spatial pattern of L3E3A is consistent with demographic events that shaped sub-Saharan population structure during the Holocene. The Bantu expansion (starting roughly 3–5 kya and accelerating in the last ~2–3 kya) moved people and maternal lineages from West/Central Africa into Central, Southern and Eastern Africa, and L3E3A tracks with many maternal lineages that dispersed in this process. Later historical movements, including the transatlantic slave trade (the last ~500 years), transmitted L3E3A lineages to the Americas and the Caribbean, where they persist among African-descended communities. Localized cultural phases in West/Central Africa (Iron Age communities, early agricultural societies) likely hosted and amplified L3E3A lineages.
Conclusion
L3E3A is a Holocene maternal subclade rooted in West/Central Africa that exemplifies fine-scale maternal diversity shaped by regional expansions and migrations, notably the Bantu dispersals and subsequent historical diasporas. Continued mitogenome sequencing across under-sampled African regions and aDNA recovery will refine the internal structure, age estimates, and precise migratory pathways of L3E3A and its sub-branches.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion