The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup M11A
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup M11A is a daughter lineage within the broader M11 branch of macro-haplogroup M. Macro-haplogroup M represents one of the primary non-African maternal lineages that diversified after the out-of-Africa dispersal; M11 itself has been dated to the Late Upper Paleolithic (parent estimates ~22 kya). M11A appears to be a younger, Holocene-derived subclade that likely formed during the early Neolithic or late post-glacial period (roughly ~9 kya, recognizing typical uncertainty in molecular clock estimates). Its emergence fits a pattern of regional diversification in East and Southeast Asia as populations expanded and reorganized after the Last Glacial Maximum.
Subclades
As a named subclade of M11, M11A may contain further internal variation (sublineages often labeled with additional letters/numbers in high-resolution studies). Published phylogenies of East Asian mtDNA typically show M11 branching into multiple minor subclades; M11A represents one of the more geographically widespread subdivisions. High-resolution mitogenome sequencing is required to resolve and name internal branches reliably; many reported low-frequency variants of M11A derive from population surveys rather than comprehensive phylogeographic sampling.
Geographical Distribution
M11A is principally a regional East Eurasian lineage with highest representation in northern and eastern parts of East Asia and scattered presence in Southeast Asia. Modern populations where M11A has been identified include Han Chinese (northern and central China), Korean and Japanese samples, several Tibeto-Burman groups and southern Chinese minorities, and isolated occurrences in mainland Southeast Asian groups (Vietnamese, Thai, Lao). The lineage also appears at low levels in some northeastern Asian and Siberian-border populations, consistent with limited northward gene flow. Ancient DNA records (four identified samples in the referenced database) indicate M11/M11A-type lineages were present in archaeological contexts in Holocene East Asia, supporting continuity of maternal lineages across late prehistory and the Neolithic.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because M11A is a low-to-moderate frequency maternal lineage rather than a highly diagnostic "founder" haplogroup of a single culture, its significance is primarily as part of the mosaic of maternal diversity in East Asia. The distribution of M11A is consistent with several processes:
- Post-glacial recolonization and local expansion of populations in East Asia during the early Holocene.
- Neolithic demographic shifts, where regional maternal lineages were redistributed alongside the spread of agriculture and associated cultural networks (but M11A is not typically cited as a primary marker of a single farming expansion).
- Regional continuity in some areas (e.g., parts of China, the Korean peninsula, and Japan) where maternal lineages show long-term presence through Holocene archaeological horizons.
Archaeological cultures with which M11A-compatible lineages have been associated in population surveys or ancient DNA contexts include Jōmon-period Japan (coastal hunter-gatherers), various Neolithic cultures of northern and central China (broadly associated with early millet and mixed farming economies), and later Holocene dispersals that contributed to Southeast Asian diversity. In most cases the association is indirect (shared geography and temporal overlap) rather than M11A being diagnostic of a single archaeological complex.
Conclusion
M11A is a regional East Eurasian maternal subclade that illustrates localized post-glacial and early Holocene diversification within the larger M11 lineage. It occurs at low-to-moderate frequencies across multiple East and Southeast Asian populations and appears in a small number of ancient DNA samples, indicating persistence through Holocene demographic events. Further full mitogenome sequencing and expanded ancient DNA sampling will clarify fine-scale phylogeny, timings, and precise prehistoric movements associated with M11A.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion