In human mitochondrial genetics, Haplogroup G is a human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup.
Haplogroup G | |
---|---|
Possible time of origin | 35,700 YBP[1] |
Possible place of origin | East Asia |
Ancestor | M12'G |
Descendants | G1, G2, G3, G4 |
Defining mutations | 709, 4833, 5108[2] |
Origin
editHaplogroup G is a descendant of haplogroup M. Haplogroup G is divided into subclades G1, G2, G3, and G4.
Distribution
editIt is an East Asian haplogroup.[3] Today, haplogroup G is found at its highest frequency in indigenous populations of the lands surrounding the Sea of Okhotsk.[4][5] Haplogroup G is one of the most common mtDNA haplogroups among modern Ainu, Siberian, Mongol, Tibetan and Central and North Asian Turkic peoples people (as well as among people of the prehistoric Jōmon culture in Hokkaidō). It is also found at a lower frequency among many other populations of East Asia, Central Asia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal.[6][7][8][9] However, unlike other mitochondrial DNA haplogroups typical of populations of northeastern Asia, such as haplogroup A, haplogroup C, and haplogroup D, haplogroup G has not been found among indigenous peoples of the Americas.
Table of Frequencies by ethnic group
editPopulation | Frequency | Count | Source | Subtypes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Itelmen | 0.681 | 47 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G1=32 |
Koryak | 0.419 | 155 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G1=65 |
Chuvantsi (Markovo, Chukotka) | 0.281 | 32 | Volodko 2008 | G1=9 |
Negidal | 0.273 | 33 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G1=9 |
Tharu (Chitwan, Nepal) | 0.233 | 133 | Fornarino 2009 | G2a=19, G(xG2a)=12 |
Kazakh (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan) | 0.200 | 20 | Comas 2004 | G2a=4 |
Ainu | 0.196 | 51 | [10] | G1=8, G2=2 |
Tibetan (Lhasa, Tibet) | 0.182 | 44 | Ji 2012 | G2a=3, G3b=3, G2(xG2a)=2 |
Mongolian (Ulan Bator) | 0.170 | 47 | Jin 2009 | G2a=5, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=2, G3=1 |
Korean (Arun Banner) | 0.167 | 48 | Kong 2003 | G2(xG2a)=3, G2a=3, G1a=1, G3=1 |
Tibetan (Nyingchi, Tibet) | 0.167 | 24 | Ji 2012 | G=4 |
Oirat Mongol (Xinjiang) | 0.163 | 49 | Yao 2004 | G2a=3, G2(xG2a)=3, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=2 |
Tibetan (Shannan, Tibet) | 0.158 | 19 | Ji 2012 | G=3 |
Yukaghir (Lower Kolyma-Indigirka) | 0.146 | 82 | Volodko 2008 | G1=12 |
Kyrgyz (Talas) | 0.146 | 48 | Yao 2004 | G2a=7 |
Tibetan (Shannan, Tibet) | 0.145 | 55 | Ji 2012 | G2a=4, G2(xG2a)=3, G3b=1 |
Uyghur (Xinjiang) | 0.128 | 47 | Yao 2004 | G2a=5, G3=1 |
Tharu (Morang, Nepal) | 0.125 | 40 | Fornarino 2009 | G2a=4, G(xG2a)=1 |
Japanese (Gifu) | 0.116 | 1617 | Fuku 2007 | G=188 |
Ulch | 0.115 | 87 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G1=9, G2=1 |
Oroqen (Oroqen Autonomous Banner) | 0.114 | 44 | Kong 2003 | G(xG1a, G2, G3)=5 |
Tibetan (Qinghai) | 0.107 | 56 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=2, G2a=2, G2(xG2a)=1, G3=1 |
Mongolian (Ulan Bator) | 0.106 | 47 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=4, G1=1 |
Tuvan | 0.105 | 95 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G2=6, G3=4 |
Huatou Yao (Fangcheng, Guangxi) | 0.105 | 19 | [citation needed] | G2=2 |
Japanese | 0.104 | 211 | Maruyama 2003 | G4a=12, G2a=6, G4b=2, G2(xG2a)=1, G(xG2, G4a, G4b)=1 |
Tibetan (Chamdo, Tibet) | 0.103 | 29 | Ji 2012 | G3b=2, G2a=1 |
Tibetan (Shigatse, Tibet) | 0.103 | 29 | Ji 2012 | G2a=2, G2(xG2a)=1 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.103 | 185 | Jin 2009 | G2(xG2a)=7, G2a=6, G3=4, G1a=1, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=1 |
Japanese (Tokyo) | 0.102 | 118 | Zheng 2011 | G=12 |
Khamnigan (Buryatia) | 0.101 | 99 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=9, G3=1 |
Han (Beijing) | 0.100 | 40 | Jin 2009 | G2a=2, G2(xG2a)=1, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=1 |
Manchurian | 0.100 | 40 | Jin 2009 | G1a=3, G2a=1 |
Tu Yao (Hezhou, Guangxi) | 0.098 | 41 | [citation needed] | G2=4 |
Japanese (Tōkai) | 0.096 | 282 | Umetsu 2005 | G1a=13, G(xG1a, G1b)=12, G1b=2 |
Even (Eveno-Bytantaysky & Momsky) | 0.095 | 105 | Fedorova 2013 | G1b=9, G2a(xG2a5)=1 |
Barghut (Hulunbuir) | 0.094 | 149 | Derenko 2012 | G2=13, G3=1 |
Chukchi | 0.091 | 66 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G1=6 |
Xiban Yao (Fangcheng, Guangxi) | 0.091 | 11 | [citation needed] | G2=1 |
Daur (Evenk Autonomous Banner) | 0.089 | 45 | Kong 2003 | G1a=2, G2a=2 |
Hui (Xinjiang) | 0.089 | 45 | Yao 2004 | G2a=2, G1a=1, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=1 |
Japanese (Hokkaidō) | 0.088 | 217 | Asari 2007 | G1a=11, G(xG1a, G1b)=7, G1b=1 |
Evenk (New Barag Left Banner) | 0.085 | 47 | Kong 2003 | G(xG1a, G2, G3)=4 |
Zhuang (Napo County, Guangxi) |
0.085 | 130 | [citation needed] | G2=8 G(xG2)=3 |
Pumi (Ninglang, Yunnan) | 0.083 | 36 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=2, G3=1 |
Kalmyk (Kalmykia) | 0.082 | 110 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=7, G1=1, G(xG1, G2a, G3)=1 |
Buryat | 0.080 | 25 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G2=1, G3=1 |
Buryat | 0.079 | 126 | Kong 2003 | G2a=8, G2(xG2a)=2 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.079 | 203 | Umetsu 2005 | G1a=9, G(xG1a, G1b)=7 |
Bai (Dali, Yunnan) | 0.074 | 68 | Wen 2004 | G2(xG2a)=5 |
Dargin (Dagestan) | 0.071 | 28 | Marchani 2008 | G=2 |
Uzbek (Xinjiang) | 0.069 | 58 | Yao 2004 | G2a=2, G3=1, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=1 |
Chinese (Shenyang, Liaoning) | 0.069 | 160 | Umetsu 2005 | G(xG1a, G1b)=8, G1a=3 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.068 | 103 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=3, G1=2, G3=2 |
Korean (Seoul National University Hospital) | 0.068 | 633 | Fuku 2007 | G=43 |
Yakut (northern Yakutia) | 0.068 | 148 | Fedorova 2013 | G2a5=6, G2a(xG2a5)=2, G1b=2 |
Chukchi (Anadyr) | 0.067 | 15 | Derenko 2007 | G1=1 |
Naxi (Lijiang, Yunnan) | 0.067 | 45 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=3 |
Tujia (Yongshun, Hunan) | 0.067 | 30 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=1, G2(xG2a)=1 |
Tuvinian | 0.067 | 105 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=4, G1=2, G3=1 |
Gelao (Daozhen County, Guizhou) | 0.065 | 31 | [citation needed] | G2a=2 |
Mien (Shangsi, Guangxi) | 0.063 | 32 | [citation needed] | G2=2 |
Korean (South Korea) | 0.061 | 261 | Kim 2008 | G(xG2)=11, G2=5 |
Mansi | 0.061 | 98 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G2=6 |
Japanese (Miyazaki) | 0.060 | 100 | Uchiyama 2007 | G4a=2, G1a=1, G1b=1, G2a1(xG2a1a)=1, G2a1a=1 |
Han (Beijing Normal University) | 0.058 | 121 | Zheng 2011 | G=7 |
Tibetan (Zhongdian, Yunnan) | 0.057 | 35 | Wen 2004 | G3=2 |
Kazakh (Xinjiang) | 0.057 | 53 | Yao 2004 | G1a=1, G2a=1, G(xG1a, G2, G3)=1 |
Altai Kizhi | 0.056 | 90 | Derenko 2007 | G1=4, G2a=1 |
Tibetan (Nyingchi, Tibet) | 0.056 | 54 | Ji 2012 | G2(xG2a)=1, G2a=1, G3b=1 |
Han (Denver, Colorado) | 0.055 | 73 | Zheng 2011 | G=4 |
Kazakh (Kazakhstan) | 0.055 | 55 | Yao 2004 | G2a=3 |
Japanese (Tōhoku) | 0.054 | 336 | Umetsu 2005 | G1a=13, G(xG1a, G1b)=5 |
Nivkh (northern Sakhalin) | 0.054 | 56 | Starikovskaya 2005 | G1=3 |
Karakalpak (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan) | 0.050 | 20 | Comas 2004 | G2a=1 |
Kim Mun (Malipo, Yunnan) | 0.050 | 40 | [citation needed] | G2=2 |
Tajik (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan) | 0.050 | 20 | Comas 2004 | G2a=1 |
Uzbek (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan) | 0.050 | 40 | Comas 2004 | G2a=2 |
Yi (Shuangbai, Yunnan) | 0.050 | 40 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=1, G2(xG2a)=1 |
Orok (Sakhalin) | 0.049 | 61 | Bermisheva 2005 | G=3 |
Gelao (Daozhen County, Guizhou) | 0.049 | 102 | [citation needed] | G(xG2, G3)=4, G2a1=1 |
Yakut (vicinity of Yakutsk) | 0.049 | 164 | Fedorova 2013 | G2a(xG2a5)=6, G2a5=2 |
Hmong (Jishou, Hunan) | 0.049 | 103 | [citation needed] | G3=2, G(xG2, G3)=2, G2=1 |
Vietnamese | 0.048 | 42 | Jin 2009 | G1a=1, G3=1 |
Japanese (northern Kyūshū) | 0.047 | 256 | Umetsu 2005 | G(xG1a, G1b)=9, G1a=3 |
Tujia (western Hunan) | 0.047 | 64 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=1, G2(xG2a)=1, G3=1 |
Tajik (Tajikistan) | 0.045 | 44 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=1, G3=1 |
Yukaghir (Verkhnekolymsky & Nizhnekolymsky) | 0.045 | 22 | Fedorova 2013 | G1b=1 |
Hazara (North West Frontier Province & Balochistan) | 0.043 | 23 | Quintana-Murci 2004 | G=1 |
Mongol (New Barag Left Banner) | 0.042 | 48 | Kong 2003 | G2(xG2a)=2 |
Evenk (Krasnoyarsk) | 0.041 | 73 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=2, G1=1 |
Aini (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan) | 0.040 | 50 | Wen 2004 | G2a=2 |
Korean (northern China) | 0.039 | 51 | Jin 2009 | G2a=1, G2(xG2a)=1 |
Kumik (Dagestan) | 0.038 | 26 | Marchani 2008 | G=1 |
Lanten Yao (Tianlin, Guangxi) | 0.038 | 26 | [citation needed] | G2=1 |
Yakut (Vilyuy River basin) | 0.036 | 111 | Fedorova 2013 | G2a(xG2a5)=2, G2a5=1, G1b=1 |
Dong (Tianzhu County, Guizhou) | 0.036 | 28 | [citation needed] | G(xG1a, G2)=1 |
Cun (Hainan) | 0.033 | 30 | [citation needed] | G=1 |
Nu (Gongshan, Yunnan) | 0.033 | 30 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=1 |
Lingao (Hainan) | 0.032 | 31 | [citation needed] | G=1 |
Yi (Luxi, Yunnan) | 0.032 | 31 | Wen 2004 | G(xG2, G3)=1 |
Pan Yao (Tianlin, Guangxi) | 0.031 | 32 | [citation needed] | G(xG2, G3)=1 |
Nogai (Dagestan) | 0.030 | 33 | Marchani 2008 | G=1 |
Han (Southwest China; pool of 44 Sichuan, 34 Chongqing, 33 Yunnan, & 26 Guizhou) | 0.029 | 137 | Ji 2012 | G1=3, G2=1 |
Han (southern California) | 0.028 | 390 | Ji 2012 | G=11 |
Telenghit (Altai Republic) | 0.028 | 71 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=2 |
Yakut (Yakutia) | 0.028 | 36 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=1 |
Hmong (Wenshan, Yunnan) | 0.026 | 39 | [citation needed] | G(xG2, G3)=1 |
Yakut | 0.026 | 117 | Kong 2003 | G2a=2, G1a=1 |
Evenk (Ust-Maysky, Oleneksky, and Zhigansky) | 0.024 | 125 | Fedorova 2013 | G1b=2, G2a(xG2a5)=1 |
Uzbek (Surkhandarya, Uzbekistan) | 0.024 | 42 | Quintana-Murci 2004 | G=1 |
Evenk (Buryatia) | 0.022 | 45 | Derenko 2007 | G3=1 |
Taiwanese (Taipei, Taiwan) | 0.022 | 91 | Umetsu 2005 | G(xG1a, G1b)=2 |
Han (Taiwan) | 0.021 | 1117 | Ji 2012 | G=24 |
Han (Xinjiang) | 0.021 | 47 | Yao 2004 | G2a=1 |
Kyrgyz (Sary-Tash) | 0.021 | 47 | Yao 2004 | G2a=1 |
Hindu (New Delhi) | 0.021 | 48 | Fornarino 2009 | G(xG2a)=1 |
Kazakh (Kosh-Agachsky, Altai Republic) | 0.020 | 98 | Derenko 2012 | G2=1, G3=1 |
Turkish (Anatolia, Turkey) | 0.020 | 50 | Quintana-Murci 2004 | G=1 |
Khanty | 0.019 | 106 | Pimenoff 2008 | G2=2 |
Uyghur (Kazakhstan) | 0.018 | 55 | Yao 2004 | G2(xG2a)=1 |
Khakassian (Khakassia) | 0.018 | 57 | Derenko 2007 | G3=1 |
Mansi | 0.016 | 63 | Pimenoff 2008 | G2=1 |
Okinawa | 0.015 | 326 | Umetsu 2005 | G(xG1a, G1b)=3, G1a=2 |
Persian (eastern Iran) | 0.012 | 82 | Derenko 2007 | G2a=1 |
Pakistani (Karachi, Pakistan) | 0.010 | 100 | Quintana-Murci 2004 | G=1 |
Li (Hainan) | 0.009 | 346 | [citation needed] | G=3 |
Dolgan (Anabarsky, Volochanka, Ust-Avam, and Dudinka) | 0.006 | 154 | Fedorova 2013 | G1b=1 |
Cham (Bình Thuận, Vietnam) | 0.006 | 168 | [citation needed] | G=1 |
Taiwan aborigines | 0.002 | 640 | [citation needed] | G=1 |
Dingban Yao (Mengla, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 10 | [citation needed] | - |
Yukaghir (Upper Kolyma) | 0.000 | 18 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Filipino (Palawan) | 0.000 | 20 | Scholes 2011 | - |
Yi (Hezhang County, Guizhou) | 0.000 | 20 | [citation needed] | - |
Hindu (Chitwan, Nepal) | 0.000 | 24 | Fornarino 2009 | - |
Guoshan Yao (Jianghua, Hunan) | 0.000 | 24 | [citation needed] | - |
Bunu (Dahua & Tianlin, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 25 | [citation needed] | - |
Kurd (northwestern Iran) | 0.000 | 25 | Derenko 2007 | - |
Iu Mien (Mengla, Yunnan) | 0.000 | 27 | [citation needed] | - |
Andhra Pradesh (tribal) | 0.000 | 29 | Fornarino 2009 | - |
Tujia (Yanhe County, Guizhou) | 0.000 | 29 | [citation needed] | - |
Batak (Palawan) | 0.000 | 31 | Scholes 2011 | - |
Wuzhou Yao (Fuchuan, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 31 | [citation needed] | - |
Bapai Yao (Liannan, Guangdong) | 0.000 | 35 | [citation needed] | - |
Tibetan (Nagchu, Tibet) | 0.000 | 35 | Ji 2012 | - |
Aleut (Commander Islands) | 0.000 | 36 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Eskimo (Sireniki) | 0.000 | 37 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Eskimo (Naukan) | 0.000 | 39 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Nganasan | 0.000 | 39 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Thai | 0.000 | 40 | Jin 2009 | - |
Lowland Yao (Fuchuan, Guangxi) | 0.000 | 42 | [citation needed] | - |
Eskimo (Chaplin) | 0.000 | 50 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Teleut (Kemerovo) | 0.000 | 53 | Derenko 2007 | - |
Han (Hunan & Fujian) | 0.000 | 55 | Zheng 2011 | - |
Saami (Finland) | 0.000 | 69 | Tambets 2004 | - |
Shor (Kemerovo) | 0.000 | 82 | Derenko 2007 | - |
Eskimo (Canada) | 0.000 | 96 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Saami (Sweden) | 0.000 | 98 | Tambets 2004 | - |
Aleut (Aleutian Islands) | 0.000 | 163 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Saami (Norway) | 0.000 | 278 | Tambets 2004 | - |
Eskimo (Greenland) | 0.000 | 385 | Volodko 2008 | - |
Subclades
editSubclade G2 is the most widely distributed, being found with low frequency in many populations all the way from eastern Europe (Poles, Ukrainians, Lipka Tatars) and western Siberia (Mansi, Khanty) to Japan (Japanese, Ainu) and from Iran (Persian) to southern China (Hmong and Tujia in Hunan and Mien in Guangxi) and Southeast Asia (Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia). G2 (and especially its subclade G2a) is notably frequent among many Mongolic- or Turkic-speaking populations of northern East Asia and Central Asia. G2a also has been found with high frequency in some samples of Tharus from southern Nepal.[11][12] The subclade G2a3 has been observed in Russia, an Azeri in Iran,[13] and a Uyghur in Artux, Xinjiang, China;[14] its subclade G2a3a has been observed among Komis and Udmurts.[15] Subclade G2a4 has been observed in China, Taiwan, and in a Ukrainian from the Lviv region of western Ukraine. Subclade G2a5 has been observed in Japan, Korea, and among Buryats, Barghuts, and various Turkic peoples (Karachay, Balkar, Kyrgyz, Kazakh, Karakalpak, Telengit, Tubalar, Yakut).
Subclade G1 is almost completely responsible for the high frequency of haplogroup G in populations located around the Sea of Okhotsk (Itelmen, Koryak, Negidal, Ulch, Ainu, Chukchi, Nivkh, etc.). G1 in Luoravetlans (Koryak & Chukchi) is essentially G1b, and this subclade is also found with generally low frequency in populations of Yakutia to the west (Evens, Yukaghirs, Evenks, Yakuts, Dolgans) as well as in Japan.[16] G1a has been found in samples from China (Daur, Hui, Kazakh, Sarikoli,[14] Korean, Manchu, Yi,[17] Jino,[17] Yunnan Dai,[17] Jiangxi Han,[17] and a sample of the general population of the city of Shenyang), Tajikistan (Pamiris[14]), Japan, Korea, Vietnam, and central Siberia (Yakut, Altai-kizhi). G1c has been found in China, Korea, and a Seletar.
Subclade G3 is relatively rare. It has been found mainly among Koreans,[18] Tibetans, and presently Turkic- or Mongolic-speaking populations in southern Siberia and vicinity, and occasionally among Evenks in Buryatia, Japanese, Pumi, Naxi,[17] Uyghurs,[14] Sarikolis,[14] Tajiks, Pashtuns and Hazaras in Afghanistan, Kashmir, Han Chinese in Sichuan,[17] Hmong and Tujia in western Hunan, and Vietnamese.
Subclade G4 has been found in Japan and possibly in one Chinese individual from Guizhou.[17]
Tree
editThis phylogenetic tree of haplogroup G subclades is based on the paper by Mannis van Oven and Manfred Kayser Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation[2] and subsequent published research.
- G
- G1
- G1a
- G1a1
- G1a1a
- G1a1a1
- G1a1a2
- G1a1a3
- G1a1a
- G1a2'3
- G1a2
- G1a3
- G1a3a
- G1a1
- G1b
- G1c
- G1a
- G2
- G2a
- G2a1
- G2a1a
- G2a1b
- G2a1c
- G2a2
- G2a3
- G2a3a
- G2a4
- G2a1
- G2b
- G2b1
- G2a
- G3
- G3a
- G3a1
- G3a2
- G3b
- G3b1
- G3a
- G4
- G1
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Soares, Pedro; Luca Ermini; Noel Thomson; Maru Mormina; Teresa Rito; Arne Röhl; Antonio Salas; Stephen Oppenheimer; Vincent Macaulay; Martin B. Richards (4 June 2009). "Supplemental Data Correcting for Purifying Selection: An Improved Human Mitochondrial Molecular Clock". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 84 (6): 82–93. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.05.001. PMC 2694979. PMID 19500773.
- ^ 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.
- ^ Haplogroup G.
- ^ mtDNA Haplogroup Testing Archived 2006-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Volodko, Natalia V.; Starikovskaya, Elena B.; Mazunin, Ilya O.; et al. (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.
- ^ Umetsu, Kazuo; Tanaka, Masashi; Yuasa, Isao; et al. (2005). "Multiplex amplified product-length polymorphism analysis of 36 mitochondrial single-nucleotide polymorphisms for haplogrouping of East Asian populations". Electrophoresis. 26 (1): 91–98. doi:10.1002/elps.200406129. PMID 15624129. S2CID 44989190.
- ^ Fuku, Noriyuki; Soo Park, Kyong; Yamada, Yoshiji; et al. (2007). "Mitochondrial Haplogroup N9a Confers Resistance against Type 2 Diabetes in Asians". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 80 (3): 407–415. doi:10.1086/512202. PMC 1821119. PMID 17273962.
- ^ Asari, M; et al. (2007). "Utility of haplogroup determination for forensic mtDNA analysis in the Japanese population". Leg Med. 9 (5): 237–240. doi:10.1016/j.legalmed.2007.01.007. PMID 17467322.
- ^ Ranaweera, Lanka; Kaewsutthi, Supannee; Win Tun, Aung; Boonyarit, Hathaichanoke; Poolsuwan, Samerchai; Lertrit, Patcharee (2014). "Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: Their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations". Journal of Human Genetics. 59 (1): 28–36. doi:10.1038/jhg.2013.112. PMID 24196378. S2CID 41185629.
- ^ Tajima A, Hayami M, Tokunaga K, et al. (2004). "Genetic origins of the Ainu inferred from combined DNA analyses of maternal and paternal lineages". Journal of Human Genetics. 49 (4): 187–193. doi:10.1007/s10038-004-0131-x. PMID 14997363.
- ^ Fornarino, Simona; Pala, Maria; Battaglia, Vincenza; et al. (2009). "Mitochondrial and Y-chromosome diversity of the Tharus (Nepal): a reservoir of genetic variation". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 9 (1): 154. Bibcode:2009BMCEE...9..154F. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-9-154. PMC 2720951. PMID 19573232.
- ^ Pimenoff, Ville N; Comas, David; Palo, Jukka U; et al. (2008). "Northwest Siberian Khanty and Mansi in the junction of West and East Eurasian gene pools as revealed by uniparental markers". European Journal of Human Genetics. 16 (10): 1254–1264. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2008.101. PMID 18506205. S2CID 19488203.
- ^ Derenko M, Malyarchuk B, Bahmanimehr A, Denisova G, Perkova M, et al. (2013), "Complete Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in Iranians." PLoS ONE 8(11): e80673. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0080673
- ^ a b c d e Min-Sheng Peng, Weifang Xu, Jiao-Jiao Song, et al. (2018), "Mitochondrial genomes uncover the maternal history of the Pamir populations." European Journal of Human Genetics https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-017-0028-8
- ^ Kristiina Tambets, Bayazit Yunusbayev, Georgi Hudjashov, et al., "Genes reveal traces of common recent demographic history for most of the Uralic-speaking populations." Genome Biology (2018) 19:139. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-018-1522-1
- ^ Uchiyama, Taketo; Hisazumi, Rinnosuke; Shimizu, Kenshi; et al. (2007). "Mitochondrial DNA Sequence Variation and Phylogenetic Analysis in Japanese Individuals from Miyazaki Prefecture". Japanese Journal of Forensic Science and Technology. 12 (1): 83–96. doi:10.3408/jafst.12.83.
- ^ a b c d e f g Qing-Peng Kong, Chang Sun, Hua-Wei Wang, et al. (2011), "Large-Scale mtDNA Screening Reveals a Surprising Matrilineal Complexity in East Asia and Its Implications to the Peopling of the Region." Molecular Biology and Evolution 28(1):513–522. doi:10.1093/molbev/msq219
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External links
edit- General
- Ian Logan's Mitochondrial DNA Site
- Mannis van Oven's Phylotree
- Haplogroup G
- YFull MTree's Haplogroup G
- MITOMAP's Haplogroup G
- FamilyTreeDNA's mtDNA Haplotree: Haplogroup G
- FamilyTreeDNA's G mtDNA Project
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 |