The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup T2B3
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup T2B3 is a downstream branch of T2B, itself a subclade of the broader haplogroup T2. T2 lineages are generally associated with populations that expanded from refugia in the Near East and Mediterranean after the Last Glacial Maximum. Based on the phylogenetic position of T2B3 below T2B (parent node dated ~14 kya) and its occurrence in early Holocene and Neolithic contexts, T2B3 most plausibly arose in the Near East or Mediterranean fringe during the early Holocene (roughly the 10–8 kya window) and subsequently dispersed into Europe with the expansion of farmer populations and continued coastal and inland gene flow.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present T2B3 is recognized as a distinct branch within T2B; published and database lineages sometimes resolve further downstream subclades (for example, labels such as T2B3a or similarly numbered subbranches where high-resolution complete mitogenomes are available). Where such subclades are robustly defined they typically reflect regionally restricted expansions (for instance, localized Mediterranean or Balkan founder effects). Because resolution depends on complete mitogenomes and dense sampling, the substructure of T2B3 continues to be refined as more ancient and modern full mitogenomes are sequenced.
Geographical Distribution
T2B3 is most commonly observed across the Mediterranean and southern Europe, with additional occurrences in the Near East, parts of North Africa, the Caucasus, and low-frequency appearances in Central and Eastern Europe. In modern populations its frequency is typically moderate in Southern Europe and the Near East and low but detectable elsewhere. Archaeogenetic data show T2-lineages (including T2B subclades) in Early Neolithic farmer assemblages across Anatolia and southeast Europe, and sporadically in later Bronze Age and Iron Age contexts, consistent with a primary Neolithic expansion and subsequent population movements and local differentiation.
Historical and Cultural Significance
The presence of T2B3 in early farming contexts ties it to the demic diffusion of agriculture from Anatolia and the Near East into Europe. It is therefore associated with the maternal legacy of Early European Farmers (EEF) and their descendant archaeological cultures. Later archaeological periods show continuity in some regions and admixture in others: coastal and Mediterranean populations commonly retain T2-derived lineages, while inland and northern populations show reduced frequencies due to later demographic events. T2B3 is also reported at low frequencies in some Jewish communities (including certain Ashkenazi maternal lineages), reflecting either Near Eastern maternal ancestry or later gene flow and founder effects.
Conclusion
T2B3 is a regionally informative maternal lineage that reflects post-glacial and early Holocene population dynamics across the Near East and Mediterranean into Europe. It is particularly useful in archaeogenetic studies as a marker of Neolithic farmer ancestry in southern and central Europe, while its scattered presence elsewhere records later migrations, local founder events, and interactions among Mediterranean, Near Eastern and European populations. Continued high-resolution mitogenome sequencing—especially of ancient samples—will refine the internal structure and temporal dynamics of T2B3.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion