The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup M11A2
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup M11A2 is a downstream subclade of M11A, itself a regional branch of macro-haplogroup M that diversified in East and Southeast Asia during the early Holocene. Based on its phylogenetic position under M11A (parent node dated to roughly ~9 kya) and patterns of modern and limited ancient sampling, M11A2 most likely emerged in local East Asian populations around the mid-to-late Holocene (estimated ~7 kya). Its distribution and diversity are consistent with a lineage that expanded or persisted through post‑glacial population reorganization and the later Neolithic demographic changes in East Asia.
Subclades
M11A2 is a downstream clade with relatively limited internal diversity reported in modern databases compared with deeper East Asian mtDNA branches (e.g., M7, D4). Where dense sampling exists, M11A2 shows shallow internal structure, suggesting either a localized founder effect in particular regional populations or relatively recent diversification. Additional sub-branches may be present at low frequency in localized populations (for example regional Chinese, Korean or Japanese lineages), but comprehensive high-resolution phylogenies are still limited by sample size in many regions.
Geographical Distribution
M11A2 is primarily an East Asian maternal lineage found at low-to-moderate frequencies across a range of populations. It is most commonly observed among Han Chinese (northern and central China), Koreans, and some Japanese samples, with scattered occurrences in Tibeto‑Burman groups, southern Chinese minorities (Hmong–Mien, Tai‑Kadai affiliated groups) and mainland Southeast Asian populations (Vietnamese, Thai, Lao). Occurrences are rarer but present among populations near the northeastern Asian / Siberian border. The overall picture is one of a regional East/Southeast Asian haplogroup with patchy but consistent presence across several ethnolinguistic groups.
Historical and Cultural Significance
M11A2 most likely reflects maternal lineages that were part of post‑glacial reexpansion and subsequent Neolithic demographic processes in East Asia. Its presence in Han, Korean and Japanese populations suggests it was carried by populations that participated in the broad east Asian Neolithic transformations—agriculture adoption and population movements associated with rice and millet farming—though M11A2 is not a hallmark signature of any single archaeological culture. In Japan, occurrences of M11A2 in modern populations may trace to migrants associated with the Yayoi period (rice‑agriculture dispersals) or later gene flow between the Korean peninsula and the Japanese archipelago. The haplogroup's low-to-moderate frequency and limited deep substructure indicate it contributed to maternal diversity without dominating the maternal gene pool in any one culture.
Archaeogenetic records currently report only a small number of ancient occurrences of M11A clades overall; M11A2 has been identified in at least one archaeogenetic sample in available databases, which supports continuity or reoccurrence of this lineage in archaeological contexts but also highlights the need for more ancient DNA sampling to clarify its prehistoric dynamics.
Conclusion
M11A2 is a modestly widespread East/Southeast Asian mtDNA subclade that emerged as a descendant of M11A during the early-to-mid Holocene. It illustrates the fine-scale maternal structure formed by post‑glacial population movements and Neolithic demographic expansions in East Asia. While not a high-frequency lineage, its distribution across multiple modern East Asian populations and sporadic presence in ancient samples make it useful for reconstructing regional maternal genealogies and migration histories, especially when combined with other mtDNA lineages and autosomal data.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion