Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Haplogroup F (mtDNA)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human mitochondrial DNA haplogroup
This article is about the human mtDNA haplogroup. For the human Y-DNA haplogroup, seeHaplogroup F-M89.

Haplogroup F
Possible time of origin43,400 YBP[1]
Possible place of originAsia
AncestorR9
DescendantsF1, F2, F3, F4
Defining mutations249d, 6392, 10310[2]

Haplogroup F is ahuman mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup. The clade is most common inEast Asia andSoutheast Asia. It has not been found amongNative Americans.[3]

It is a primary branch ofhaplogroup R9.

Distribution

[edit]

The F haplogroup is fairly common inEast Asia. High frequencies of the clade are found among theLahu fromYunnan (33% - 77%, average 52%),Nicobar Islands (50%),Shors fromKemerovo Oblast of Siberia (41%), andArunachal Pradesh, India (31%).[4] There is also an important frequency inTaiwanese aborigines,Khakas,Kets,Han Chinese (and, thus, nearly all of China),Lombok,Sumba,Thailand, andVietnam. Its distribution extends with low frequency to theTharu of southernNepal and theBashkirs of the southernUrals.[5][6][7]

Haplogroup F also occurs at low frequencies on theComoros Islands (<10%).[8]It is also found at low frequencies on theHvar island in Croatia (8.3%).

Subclades

[edit]

F1a clearly predominates among the representatives of haplogroup F inSoutheast Asia, but subclades of this haplogroup have been found in populations as far north as theBuryats andUlchi of Siberia.

F1b tends to become more frequent as a fraction of total F in populations of the northern parts ofEast Asia andCentral Asia, such asMongols,Kazakhs,Uyghurs, andJapanese. It also has been found among theYi people. There are odd exclaves of F1b in GaininskBashkirs ofPerm Oblast andCroats ofHvar Island.[5][9]

F1d is the second most frequent sub-clade in Newar (Nepal). Haplogroup F1d reaches the greatest proportion in Newar (11.97%) of Nepal and Kshatriya (16%) of North India.[10]

F2 has been found mainly in the form of F2a, which has been observed in more than 10% of a couple samples ofNu andLisu fromGongshan,Yunnan.[11] F2 has been found with frequencies exceeding 5% in several other populations ofSouthwest China,Guangxi, andHainan, including theHan majority population. Outside of southwestern China, F2 has been found with frequency greater than 5% in a sample ofOiratMongols fromXinjiang and a sample ofKhakas fromKhakassia, with the former population boasting particularly high diversity within this clade.

F3 is especially common amongAustronesian peoples ofTaiwan and theMalay Archipelago, but it also has been found in many populations ofSouthwest China andSouth-Central China, and in a sample ofHans fromXinjiang.

F4 has been found mainly in aboriginal populations ofTaiwan andHainan, with some representatives among samples of Filipinos fromLuzon, Indonesians fromSumatra, and Hans and Uzbeks fromXinjiang.

Tree

[edit]

This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup F subclades is based on the paper by Mannis van Oven and Manfred KayserUpdated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation[2] and subsequent published research.

  • F
    • F* – China, Korea[12]
    • F1
      • F1a'c'f – Thailand (Kaleun in Nakhon Phanom Province[13]), China, Korea,[12] Kazakhstan
        • F1a – China, Korea,[12] Uyghur, Thailand, Mongolia[14]
          • F1a1'4 – Thailand (Khon Mueang in Chiang Rai Province[13]), China (Ma'an site,Wuxi,Majiabang culture)
            • F1a1 – Japan, Korea,[12] China, Ulchi, Uyghur, Vietnam (incl.Cờ Lao), Laos, Thailand, Indonesia, Mexico
              • F1a1a – Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, China (Zhanjiang,etc.), Tibet, Indonesia
                • F1a1a1 – Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, Nicobar Islands, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Uyghur
              • F1a1b – Japan, Korea
              • F1a1c – Zhuang (Bama), Thailand, Tibet, Buryats (Inner Mongolia and Irkutsk Oblast), Japan
                • F1a1c1 – Moken
                • F1a1c2 – Japan, Xibo, China (Shanghai)
              • F1a1d – Thailand, China, Taiwanese Aborigines (Tsou, Bunun, Rukai), Philippines
                • F1a1d1 –Tao (Orchid Island)
            • F1a4
              • F1a4a – Thailand, Han Chinese (Denver), Ulchi
                • F1a4a1 – Taiwanese Aborigines (Tsou, Makatao, Bunun, Ami,etc.), Philippines (Ivatan, Ibaloi, Abaknon,Bugkalot, Kalangoya, Dulag,etc.), Guam, Malaysia (Kelantan Malay), Sumatra, Vietnam (Dao), Thailand (Khon Mueang in Mae Hong Son Province and Chiang Mai Province[13]), South Africa
              • F1a4b – China
          • F1a2 – Thailand, Vietnam (Hmong), China (Guizhou)
            • F1a2a – Thailand (Phutai in Sakon Nakhon Province, Nyaw in Nakhon Phanom Province, Mon in Lopburi Province[13]), China (Han in Zhanjiang,Dong,etc.)
          • F1a3
            • F1a3a – Philippines (Lipa City,Abaknon,Batak from Palawan Island,Aeta fromBataan), Taiwan, Indonesia
            • F1a3b - China (Hunan Han, etc.), Taiwan (Minnan from Kaohsiung, etc.), Kazakhstan (Jetisu)
            • F1a3c (C10223T) - Thailand (Khmer, etc.), China (Han)
            • F1a3e (C11860T) - Thailand, China (Uyghurs)
        • F1c – Japan
          • F1c1 – Japan
            • F1c1a – Korea, Xinjiang, Tibet, Jammu and Kashmir, Thailand (Palaung in Chiang Mai Province, Khmu in Nan Province, Khon Mueang in Lampang Province[13])
              • F1c1a1 – Russia, China (Qingdao,etc.), Evenk (New Barag Left Banner),Oroqen,Zhuang (Bama), Taiwan (Minnan)
                • F1c1a1a – Tibet (Shannan, Sherpa,etc.),Yi
                • F1c1a1b – China
              • F1c1a2 – Tibet, Thailand, China (Chongqing), India
        • F1f – Thailand, China,Lahu, Myanmar, Tibet, Cambodia, Vietnam (Hmong)
      • F1-T16189C!
        • F1b - Korea,[12] Japan, Mongolia,[14] China (North China)
          • F1b1 – China, Tibet (Shigatse,etc.), Ladakh, Uyghur (Artux,etc.), Kyrgyz, Azeri, Kurd (Iran), Armenian, Turkey, Russia, Croatia
            • F1b1a – Japan, Korea, Uyghur
              • F1b1a1 – Japan, Korea
                • F1b1a1a – Japan, Korea, USA (African American)[16]
                  • F1b1a1a1 – Japan, Korea
                    • F1b1a1a1a – Japan
                  • F1b1a1a2 – Japan, Korea
                  • F1b1a1a3 – Japan
              • F1b1a2 – Japan, Korea
            • F1b1b – Yakut, Uyghur, Kyrgyz, Turk, Even (Sakkyryyr,Tompo), Korea
            • F1b1c – China,Yi, Buryat
            • F1b1d – Japan, Korea
            • F1b1e – Uyghur, Kyrgyz, Buryat, Oroqen, Russian (Sverdlovsk Oblast)
              • F1b1e1 – Yakut
            • F1b1f – China, Uyghur, Buryat (Buryat Republic), Yakut (Namsky District), Evenk (Stony Tunguska River basin), Hungary (ancientAvars)
        • F1d – China (Hunan, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Beijing, Liaoning,Korean fromAntu County, Hezhen, Minnan, Lhasa,etc.), Thailand (Mon in Kanchanaburi Province[13]), South Korea, Japan, Kyrgyz (Artux, Ak-Say), ancient Scythian
          • F1d1 – Tibet, Nepal (Tharu), Newar of Nepal (12%),[10] Myanmar, Thailand (Mon in Kanchanaburi Province[13]), China, Japan, South Africa
        • F1e
          • F1e1 – China (North China), Mongolia
            • F1e1a – Japan
          • F1e2 – China, Kyrgyz (Tashkurgan)
          • F1e3 – China (Guangdong,etc.), Laos (Lao in Vientiane[13]), Thailand (Phuan in Lopburi Province and Phichit Province[13]), Sumatra, Vietnam (Kinh)
        • F1g – Tibet, Thailand (Phuan in Lopburi Province, Sukhothai Province, and Phichit Province[13]), China, Kyrgyz (Tashkurgan)
          • F1g1 – China (Yunnan,etc.), Vietnam (Hmong,Dao), Nepal (Newar, 2.4%)[10]
    • F2
      • F2* – Laos (Lao in Vientiane[13]), China, Hong Kong, Uyghur (Artux)
      • F2a'b'g
        • F2a – China (Han from Beijing, Xinjiang,etc.), Taiwan (Makatao), Korea,[12] Japan, Kazakhstan
          • F2a1 – China (Han from Shandong),Naxi,Bai,Nu, Tu (Monguor),[17]Yi,Tibetan
          • F2a2 – China (Han from Zhanjiang,etc.), Miao (Guizhou), Kinh (Guangxi), Dai and Lisu (Yunnan)[17]
          • F2a3 – China (Han from Xinjiang, Yunnan, Qinghai, and Shandong), Tu, Hui, Mongols in Inner Mongolia[17]
        • F2b – China (Han from Qingdao), Taiwan (Hakka)
          • F2b1 – Thailand (Lao Isan in Roi Et Province and Chaiyaphum Province, Khon Mueang in Lampang Province[13]), China (Han from Beijing, Xinjiang,etc.), Buryat (Irkutsk Oblast), Yakut, Even (NE Sakha Republic),[18] Yukaghir (NE Sakha Republic),[18] Nepal (Newar, 1.1%)[10]
        • F2g – China, Ladakh
      • F2c – China
        • F2c1 – China (Shantou,etc.), Japan
        • F2c2 – China (Han from Beijing), Kyrgyzstan (Kyrgyz)
      • F2d – China, Uyghur, Thailand (Khon Mueang in Chiang Mai Province and Lamphun Province[13]), Singapore, Japan, Kazakhstan
      • F2e – China, Thailand (Tai Yuan in Uttaradit Province, Phuan in Phrae Province and Lopburi Province, Khon Mueang in Chiang Mai Province[13]), Vietnam (Dao)
        • F2e1 – China, Barghut (Hulun Buir)
      • F2f – Japan, Korea, China, Pakistan (Hazara), Azerbaijan (Astara),[citation needed]Bashkortostan (Bashkir), Poland
      • F2h'i – China
        • F2h – China, Tibet (Lhasa), Taiwan, Thailand (Tai Dam in Kanchanaburi Province[13])
        • F2i – China, Taiwan (Makatao), Korea
    • F3 (formerly R9a)
      • F3a – China (Han from Ili,etc.), Uyghur, Thailand
        • F3a1 – China (Han from Yunnan, Guizhou, Shantou,Lanzhou,[19]etc.), Kyrgyz (Tashkurgan), Taiwan (Hakka,etc.), Thailand (Phuan in Suphan Buri Province,Shan in Mae Hong Son Province,Khon Mueang in Chiang Rai Province, Mae Hong Son Province, Chiang Mai Province, Lamphun Province, and Lampang Province[13]), Vietnam (Hmong,Dao)
      • F3b – Thailand, Japan, Korea,[12] China (Han from Qijiang),Yi
        • F3b1 – Philippines, Comoros (Comorian from Grande Comore), USA
          • F3b1a – Taiwan (Rukai, Puyuma, Paiwan, Tsou, Makatao, Bunun, Ami,etc.), Philippines (Maranao)
            • F3b1a1 – Philippines (Bugkalot), Indonesia
            • F3b1a2 – Taiwan (Puyuma, Bunun, Paiwan,etc.)
          • F3b1b – Madagascar, Sumatra, Philippines (Batak from Palawan Island)
            • F3b1b1 – Philippines (Ibaloi, Kankanaey, Ifugao), Spain, Denmark
    • F4
      • F4a – Thailand/Laos, China, Taiwan, Korea[12]
        • F4a1
        • F4a2 – China, Laos (Lao in Vientiane and Luang Prabang[13]), Thailand (Phuan in Lopburi Province,Nyah Kur in Chaiyaphum Province, Khon Mueang in Lamphun Province[13])
      • F4b – China (Han from Beijing), Thailand (Khon Mueang in Mae Hong Son Province,Lao Isan in Roi Et Province[13])
        • F4b1 – China, Taiwan (Atayal, Bunun, Saisiyat, Thao, Tsou, Ami, Makatao,etc.), Philippines, Madagascar

Table of frequencies by ethnic group

[edit]
This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Haplogroup F" mtDNA – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(February 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
PopulationFrequencyCountSourceSubtypes
Lahu (Lancang,Yunnan)0.77135[11]F1a=18, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=9
Senoi (Malaysia)0.44252[20]F1a1a=23
Tujia (Yongshun,Hunan)0.43330[11]F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=6, F1a=4, F1c=2, F1b=1
Shor (Kemerovo)0.41582[4]F1=33, F2a=1
Lahu (Simao,Yunnan)0.34432[11]F1a=10, F2a=1
Lahu (Xishuangbanna,Yunnan)0.33315[11]F1a=3, F1b=1, F1c=1
Pan Yao (Tianlin,Guangxi)0.31332[21]F3=2, F1b=2, F1a1a=2, F1a1(xF1a1a)=2, F1a(xF1a1)=1, F1c=1
Yi (Hezhang County,Guizhou)0.30020[citation needed]F1b=4, F1a=2
Lingao (Hainan)0.29031[citation needed]F(xF1, F2, F3, F4)=2, F2=2, F1(xF1a)=1, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F1a1a=1, F3=1, F4=1
Lowland Yao (Fuchuan,Guangxi)0.28642[21]F2a=4, F1a1(xF1a1a)=2, F1a(xF1a1)=2, F1b=1, F1c=1, F1(xF1a, F1b, F1c)=1, F3=1
Xiban Yao (Fangcheng,Guangxi)0.27311[21]F1b=1, F1a(xF1a1)=1, F(xF1, F2a, F3)=1
Lanten Yao (Tianlin,Guangxi)0.26926[21]F1a(xF1a1)=5, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F(xF1, F2a, F3)=1
Bai (Xishuangbanna,Yunnan)0.26319[11]F1a=2, F1b=2, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=1
Huatou Yao (Fangcheng,Guangxi)0.26319[21]F1a1a=2, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F1a(xF1a1)=1, F(xF1, F2a, F3)=1
Vietnamese0.26242[citation needed]F1a=10, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2)=1
Taiwan (aborigines)0.253640[citation needed]F4=72, F3=54, F1a1(xF1a1a)=21, F1a(xF1a1)=14, F2=1
Bai (Dali,Yunnan)0.25068[11]F1a=6, F1c=4, F2a=4, F1b=2, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=1
Indonesian (Mataram,Lombok)0.25044[20]F1a1a=4, F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=4, F1a3=1, F1a4=1, F(xF1a, F1b, F2, F3a, F3b, F4)=1
Uyghur (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.25016[22]F=4
Yi (Xishuangbanna,Yunnan)0.25016[11]F1b=2, F1a=1, F2a=1
Khakassian (Khakassia)0.24657[4]F1=11, F2a=3
Naxi (Lijiang,Yunnan)0.24445[11]F1a=8, F1b=2, F2a=1
Bunu (Dahua &Tianlin,Guangxi)0.24025[21]F1b=2, F(xF1, F2a, F3)=1, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F1a1a=1, F3=1
Ket0.23738[23]F=9
Han (Beijing)0.22540[citation needed]F1a=4, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2)=3, F1b=2
Taiwanese (Taipei,Taiwan)0.22091[citation needed]F=20
Han (Southwest China; pool of 44 Sichuan, 34 Chongqing, 33 Yunnan, & 26 Guizhou)0.219137[citation needed]F1a=15, F2=8, F3=7
Hani (Xishuangbanna,Yunnan)0.21233[11]F1a=6, F1b=1
Tibetan (Shigatse,Tibet)0.20729[citation needed]F1a=5, F1b=1
Tujia (Yanhe County,Guizhou)0.20729[citation needed]F1a=2, F1c=1, F2a3=1, F2b=1, F(xF1, F2)=1
Bapai Yao (Liannan,Guangdong)0.20035[21]F1b=3, F3=2, F1a1a=1, F1a(xF1a1)=1
Indonesian (Waingapu,Sumba)0.20050[20]F1a4=3, F1a3=2, F1a1a=2, F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=1, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F3b=1
Manchurian0.20040[citation needed]F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2)=3, F1a=2, F1b=2, F1c=1
Thai0.20040[citation needed]F1b=8
Li (Hainan)0.197346[citation needed]F1a1(xF1a1a)=30, F2=20, F1(xF1a)=4, F1a(xF1a1)=4, F1a1a=3, F3=3, F4=3, F(xF1, F2, F3, F4)=1
Han (Xinjiang)0.19147[citation needed]F1a=2, F3=2, F1b=1, F1c=1, F2a2=1, F2a3=1, F4=1
Thailand0.190105[24]F1=18, F(xF1)=2
Lisu (Gongshan,Yunnan)0.18937[11]F2a=4, F1b=2, F1a=1
Han (southernCalifornia)0.187390[citation needed]F=73
OiratMongol (Xinjiang)0.18449[citation needed]F2(xF2a2, F2a3, F2b)=3, F1b=3, F1a=2, F2b=1
Dong (Tianzhu County, Guizhou)0.17928[citation needed]F1a=4, F1b=1
Han (Taiwan)0.1751117[citation needed]F=196
CHB (Han fromBeijing Normal University)0.174121[citation needed]F=21
Jino (Xishuangbanna,Yunnan)0.16718[11]F1a=2, F1b=1
Nu (Gongshan,Yunnan)0.16730[11]F2a=5
Gelao (Daozhen County, Guizhou)0.16131[citation needed]F1a=3, F1(xF1a, F1b, F1c)=1, F(xF1, F2)=1
Nepal (Newar)0.155[10]F1c1a = 2.4%, F1d = 12%, F1g = 2.4%, F2b1 = 1.1%
CHD (Han fromDenver)0.15173[citation needed]F=11
Filipino (Palawan)0.15020[citation needed]F3b2=3
Indonesian (52Pekanbaru, 42Medan, 34Bangka, 28Palembang, & 24Padang)0.150180[20]F1a1a=9, F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=8, F1a5=3, F4=3, F1a3=2, F1a4=2
Kyrgyz (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.15020[22]F=3
Yi (Shuangbai,Yunnan)0.15040[11]F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=2, F1a=2, F1b=2
Mongolian (Ulan Bator)0.14947[citation needed]F1a=3, F1b=3, F2a=1
Borneo (89Banjarmasin & 68Kota Kinabalu)0.146157[20]F3b=9, F(xF1a, F1b, F2, F3a, F3b, F4)=4, F1a3=3, F1a4=3, F1a1(xF1a1a)=2, F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=1, F1a1a=1
Indonesian (Bali)0.14682[20]F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=5, F1a1(xF1a1a)=4, F1a1a=2, F(xF1a, F1b, F2, F3a, F3b, F4)=1
Hmong (Jishou,Hunan)0.146103[21]F1a1(xF1a1a)=4, F1a1a=3, F(xF1, F2a, F3)=3, F1a(xF1a1)=2, F1b=2, F3=1
Aini (Xishuangbanna,Yunnan)0.14050[11]F1a=6, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=1
Indonesian (Ambon)0.14043[20]F1a3=3, F1a4=2, F1a1a=1
Cun (Hainan)0.13330[citation needed]F4=3, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1
Hui (Xinjiang)0.13345[citation needed]F1b=2, F1c=2, F1a=1, F2a3=1
Batak (Palawan)0.12931[citation needed]F1a3=3, F3b2=1
Yi (Luxi, Yunnan)0.12931[11]F1b=3, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=1
Mongolian (Khovd Province)0.128429[14]F(xF1e1a)=7, F1=3, F1a=2, F1a1=4, F1a1a(xF1a1a1)=4, F1a2=2, F1b=2, F1b1(xF1b1b)=5, F2=1, F2a=14, F2b1=4, F4a=7
Guoshan Yao (Jianghua,Hunan)0.12524[21]F1a(xF1a1)=1, F1b=1, F3=1
Tu Yao (Hezhou,Guangxi)0.12241[21]F1a1a=4, F1a(xF1a1)=1
Gelao (Daozhen County, Guizhou)0.118102[citation needed]F1a(xF1a1)=4, F1b=3, F2(xF2a, F2b)=2, F3a=2, F3(xF3a)=1
Tibetan (Nagchu,Tibet)0.11435[citation needed]F=4
Tibetan (Lhasa,Tibet)0.11444[citation needed]F1a=2, F2=2, F1b=1
Filipino (Luzon)0.113177[25]F1a3=6, F1a4=6, F3b=5, F4b=2, F1a1a=1
Indonesian (Alor)0.11145[20]F1a4=3, F1a1a=1, F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=1
Indonesian (Sulawesi, incl. 89Manado, 64Toraja, 46Ujung Padang, & 38Palu)0.110237[20]F1a4=12, F1a3=4, F1a(xF1a1, F1a3, F1a4, F1a5)=4, F1a1a=3, F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F1a5=1, F1b=1
Tujia (westernHunan)0.10964[11]F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=2, F1a=2, F1b=2, F1c=1
Cham (Bình Thuận,Vietnam)0.107168[26]F1a1a=10, F1(xF1a)=3, F1a(xF1a1)=3, F1a1(xF1a1a)=2
Tibetan (Shannan,Tibet)0.10519[citation needed]F=2
Altai Kizhi (Altai Republic)0.102324[27]F1=25, F2=8
Dingban Yao (Mengla,Yunnan)0.10010[21]F1a(xF1a1)=1
Filipino (Visayas)0.098112[25]F1a4=7, F1a3=3, F3b=1
Korean (South Korea)0.097185[citation needed]F1a=8, F1b=8, F2(xF2a)=2
Korean (Seoul National University Hospital)0.0971365[28]F=132
Filipino0.09464[25]F1a3=3, F1a4=3
Mien (Shangsi,Guangxi)0.09432[21]F1a1(xF1a1a)=2, F1a1a=1
Tibetan (Tibet)0.093216[citation needed]F1a=13, F1b=4, F2=3
Mongolian (Mongolia)0.0922420[14]F1a=55, F1b=71, F1c=13, F1(xF1d, F1e1)=33, F2=44, F3a=2, F4a=7
CHS (Han fromHunan &Fujian)0.09155[citation needed]F=5
Altai (Altai Republic)0.091110[29]F=10
Mongolian (Khentii Province)0.091132[14]F1=1, F1a=3, F1b=5, F1c=2, F2b=1
Buryat0.087126[citation needed]F1b=6, F1a=3, F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2a)=2
Tofalar0.08746[23]F1b=4
Uzbek (Xinjiang)0.08658[citation needed]F2a3=2, F4=2, F1b=1
Tuvinian (Tuva)0.086105[4]F1=8, F2a=1
Korean (South Korea)0.083850[30]F1a(xF1a3)=7, F1a1=17, F1b1=19, F1(xF1c, F1d)=11, F2=14, F3a=2, F4a1a=1
Japanese (Tōhoku)0.083336[citation needed]F=28
Mongol (New Barag Left Banner)0.08348[citation needed]F1a=2, F1c=1, F2a=1
Pumi (Ninglang,Yunnan)0.08336[11]F2a=2, F1b=1
Tibetan (Diqing,Yunnan)0.08324[11]F1a=1, F1b=1
Korean (South Korea)0.080593[31]F=3, F1=7, F1ac=2, F1a=12, F1c=2, F1b=16, F2a=3
Korean (Ulsan)0.0791094[32]F=86
Korean (northern China)0.07851[citation needed]F(xF1a, F1b, F1c, F2)=1, F1a=1, F1b=1, F1c=1
Daur (Hulunbuir)0.076209[33]F1a=2, F1a1(xF1a1a)=4, F1a1a1=1, F1b1(xF1b1b)=2, F1c1a=1, F2(xF2d)=5, F4a1b=1
JPT (Japanese fromTokyo)0.076118[citation needed]F=9
Kazakh (Xinjiang)0.07553[citation needed]F1b=3, F2(xF2a2, F2a3, F2b)=1
Chinese (Shenyang,Liaoning)0.075160[citation needed]F=12
Danga (Hainan)0.07540[citation needed]F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F2=1, F3=1
Japanese (northernKyūshū)0.074256[citation needed]F=19
Tibetan (Nyingchi,Tibet)0.07454[citation needed]F1a=2, F1b=2
Mongolian (Sükhbaatar Province)0.073246[14]F=1, F1a=5, F1b=8, F1c=3, F2i=1
Uyghur0.07355[citation needed]F1b=2, F1a=1, F1c=1
Filipino (Mindanao)0.07170[25]F3b=2, F1a4=2, F1a3=1
Korean (Seoul &Daejeon,South Korea)0.069261[citation needed]F1=12, F(xF1)=6
Tibetan (Chamdo,Tibet)0.06929[citation needed]F1a=2
Semelai (Malaysia)0.06661[20]F1a1a=4
Japanese (Hokkaidō)0.065217Asari 2007F=14
Mongolian (Dornod Province)0.065370[14]F1(xF1c, F1d)=6, F1a=7, F1b=7, F2=4
Wuzhou Yao (Fuchuan,Guangxi)0.06531[21]F1a1(xF1a1a)=1, F3=1
Korean (South Korea)0.064203[citation needed]F=13
Mongolian (Ulan Bator)0.06447[4]F1=3
Uyghur (Xinjiang)0.06447[citation needed]F1b=2, F1a=1
Bashkir (Beloretsky,Sterlibashevsky,Ilishevsky, &Perm)0.063221[5]F=14
Dungan (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.06316[22]F=1
Japanese (Miyazaki)0.060100[34]F1b=3, F1a=2, F2a=1
Kazakh (Zhetysu)0.060200[35]F1=11, F2=1
Tharu (Chitwan,Nepal)0.060133[6]F1c=7, F1(xF1c, F1d)=1
Japanese (Gifu)0.0591617[36]F=96
Japanese (Tōkai)0.057282[citation needed]F=16
Teleut (Kemerovo)0.05753[4]F1=3
Altai Kizhi0.05690[4]F1=3, F2a=2
Kalmyk (Kalmykia)0.055110[4]F1=6
Tibetan (Shannan,Tibet)0.05555[citation needed]F1a=2, F2=1
Tibetan (Qinghai)0.05456[11]F1c=2, F1a=1
Japanese0.052211[37]F1b=9, F1a=2
Hmong (Wenshan,Yunnan)0.05139[21]F1b=1, F3=1
Kazakh (Kosh-Agach,Altai Republic)0.05198[38]F1=5
Karakalpak (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.05020[22]F=1
Tharu (Morang,Nepal)0.05040[6]F1c=1, F1d=1
Turkmen (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.05020[22]F=1
Korean (South Korea)0.049103[4]F1=5
Oroqen (Oroqen Autonomous Banner)0.04544[citation needed]F1b=2
Yakut0.043117[citation needed]F2a=3, F1b=2
Tuvan0.04295[23]F(xF1b)=3, F1b=1
Kyrgyz (Talas)0.04248[citation needed]F1a=1, F1b=1
Tibetan (Nyingchi,Tibet)0.04224[citation needed]F=1
Khamnigan (Buryatia)0.04099[4]F1=4
Iu Mien (Mengla,Yunnan)0.03727[21]F(xF1, F2a, F3)=1
Kazakh0.03655[citation needed]F1b=2
Barghut (Hulunbuir)0.034149[38]F1=4, F2=1
Buryat (Buryatia)0.031295[4]F1=7, F2a=2
Ulch people0.031160[citation needed]F1a=5
Tibetan (Zhongdian,Yunnan)0.02935[11]F2a=1
Kim Mun (Malipo,Yunnan)0.02540[21]F1a1(xF1a1a)=1
Uzbek (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.02540[22]F=1
Okinawa0.025326[citation needed]F=8
Evenk (New Barag Left Banner)0.02147[citation needed]F1c=1
Ainu0.02051[citation needed]F1b=1
Evenk (53Stony Tunguska basin & 18Tugur-Chumikan)0.01471[23]F1b=1
Telenghit (Altai Republic)0.01471[4]F1=1
Tubalar0.01472[23]F1b=1
Evenk (Krasnoyarsk)0.01473[4]F1=1
Ulchi (Old & New Bulava,Ulchsky,Khabarovsk)0.01187[23]F(xF1b)=1
Mansi0.01098[23]F=1
Khanty0.009106[7]F1=1
Chukchi (Anadyr)0.00015[4]-
Bukharan Arab (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.00020[22]-
Crimean Tatar (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.00020[22]-
Iranian (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.00020[22]-
Kazakh (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.00020[22]-
Tajik (Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan)0.00020[22]-
Hindu (Chitwan,Nepal)0.00024[6]-
Nganasan0.00024[23]-
Buryat (Kushun,Nizhneudinsk,Irkutsk Oblast)0.00025[23]-
Kurd (northwesternIran)0.00025[4]-
Andhra Pradesh (tribal)0.00029[6]-
Batek (Malaysia)0.00029[20]-
Mendriq (Malaysia)0.00032[20]-
Negidal0.00033[23]-
Temuan (Malaysia)0.00033[20]-
Yakut (Yakutia)0.00036[4]-
Tibetan (Deqin,Yunnan)0.00040[11]-
Tajik (Tajikistan)0.00044[4]-
Daur (Evenk Autonomous Banner)0.00045[citation needed]-
Evenk (Buryatia)0.00045[4]-
Udege (Gvasiugi,Imeni Lazo,Khabarovsk)0.00046[23]-
Itelmen0.00047[23]-
Kyrgyz (Sary-Tash)0.00047[citation needed]-
Korean (Arun Banner)0.00048[citation needed]-
Jahai (Malaysia)0.00051[20]-
Nivkh (northernSakhalin)0.00056[23]-
Mansi0.00063[7]-
Chukchi0.00066[citation needed]-
Siberian Eskimo0.00079[23]-
Persian (easternIran)0.00082[4]-
Koryak0.000155[23]-

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Soares P, Ermini L, Thomson N, Mormina M, Rito T, Röhl A, et al. (June 2009)."Correcting for purifying selection: an improved human mitochondrial molecular clock".American Journal of Human Genetics.84 (6):740–759.doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.05.001.PMC 2694979.PMID 19500773.
  2. ^abvan Oven M, Kayser M (February 2009)."Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation".Human Mutation.30 (2):E386 –E394.doi:10.1002/humu.20921.PMID 18853457.S2CID 27566749.
  3. ^Haplogroup F.
  4. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrsDerenko M, Malyarchuk B, Grzybowski T, Denisova G, Dambueva I, Perkova M, et al. (November 2007)."Phylogeographic analysis of mitochondrial DNA in northern Asian populations".American Journal of Human Genetics.81 (5):1025–1041.doi:10.1086/522933.PMC 2265662.PMID 17924343.
  5. ^abcM. A. Bermisheva, K. Tambets, R. Villems, and E. K. Khusnutdinova, "Diversity of Mitochondrial DNA Haplogroups in Ethnic Populations of the Volga–Ural Region",Molecular Biology Vol. 36, No. 6, 2002, pp. 802–812. Translated fromMolekulyarnaya Biologiya, Vol. 36, No. 6, 2002, pp. 990–1001.
  6. ^abcdeFornarino S, Pala M, Battaglia V, Maranta R, Achilli A, Modiano G, et al. (July 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.
  7. ^abcPimenoff VN, Comas D, Palo JU, Vershubsky G, Kozlov A, Sajantila A (October 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.
  8. ^Msaidie S, Ducourneau A, Boetsch G, Longepied G, Papa K, Allibert C, et al. (January 2011)."Genetic diversity on the Comoros Islands shows early seafaring as major determinant of human biocultural evolution in the Western Indian Ocean".European Journal of Human Genetics.19 (1):89–94.doi:10.1038/ejhg.2010.128.PMC 3039498.PMID 20700146.
  9. ^Tolk HV, Barac L, Pericic M, Klaric IM, Janicijevic B, Campbell H, et al. (September 2001)."The evidence of mtDNA haplogroup F in a European population and its ethnohistoric implications".European Journal of Human Genetics.9 (9):717–723.doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200709.PMID 11571562.
  10. ^abcdeBasnet R, Rai N, Tamang R, Awasthi NP, Pradhan I, Parajuli P, et al. (February 2023). "The matrilineal ancestry of Nepali populations".Human Genetics.142 (2):167–180.doi:10.1007/s00439-022-02488-z.PMID 36242641.S2CID 252904281.
  11. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvWen B, Xie X, Gao S, Li H, Shi H, Song X, et al. (May 2004)."Analyses of genetic structure of Tibeto-Burman populations reveals sex-biased admixture in southern Tibeto-Burmans".American Journal of Human Genetics.74 (5):856–865.doi:10.1086/386292.PMC 1181980.PMID 15042512.
  12. ^abcdefghHwan Young Lee, Ji-Eun Yoo, Myung Jin Park, Ukhee Chung, Chong-Youl Kim, and Kyoung-Jin Shin, "East Asian mtDNA haplogroup determination in Koreans: Haplogroup-level coding region SNP analysis and subhaplogroup-level control region sequence analysis."Electrophoresis (2006). DOI 10.1002/elps.200600151.
  13. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrsWibhu Kutanan, Jatupol Kampuansai, Metawee Srikummool, Daoroong Kangwanpong, Silvia Ghirotto, Andrea Brunelli, and Mark Stoneking, "Complete mitochondrial genomes of Thai and Lao populations indicate an ancient origin of Austroasiatic groups and demic diffusion in the spread of Tai–Kadai languages."Hum Genet 2016 DOI 10.1007/s00439-016-1742-y.
  14. ^abcdefgCardinali I, Bodner M, Capodiferro MR, Amory C, Rambaldi Migliore N, Gomez EJ, et al. (2022)."Mitochondrial DNA Footprints from Western Eurasia in Modern Mongolia".Frontiers in Genetics.12: 819337.doi:10.3389/fgene.2021.819337.PMC 8773455.PMID 35069708.
  15. ^abcdCite error: The named referenceFTDNA was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).
  16. ^Rebecca S Just, Melissa K Scheible, Spence A Fast,et al., "Full mtGenome reference data: development and characterization of 588 forensic-quality haplotypes representing three U.S. populations."Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2015 Jan;14:141-55. doi: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.09.021. Epub 2014 Oct 5.
  17. ^abcKong, Q.P., Yao, Y.G., Sun, C., Zhu, C.L., Zhong, L., Wang, C.Y., Cai, W.W., Xu, X.M., Xu, A.L. and Zhang, Y.P., 2004. Phylogeographic analysis of mitochondrial DNA haplogroup F2 in China reveals T12338C in the initiation codon of the ND5 gene not to be pathogenic. Journal of human genetics, 49(8), p.414.
  18. ^abSardana A Fedorova, Maere Reidla, Ene Metspalu,et al., "Autosomal and uniparental portraits of the native populations of Sakha (Yakutia): implications for the peopling of Northeast Eurasia."BMC Evolutionary Biology 2013, 13:127.http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/13/127
  19. ^abHongbin Yao, Mengge Wang, Xing Zou,et al., "New insights into the fine-scale history of western-eastern admixture of the northwestern Chinese population in the Hexi Corridor via genome-wide genetic legacy."Mol Genet Genomics 2021 Mar 1. doi: 10.1007/s00438-021-01767-0.
  20. ^abcdefghijklmnHill C, Soares P, Mormina M, Macaulay V, Meehan W, Blackburn J, et al. (December 2006)."Phylogeography and ethnogenesis of aboriginal Southeast Asians".Molecular Biology and Evolution.23 (12):2480–2491.doi:10.1093/molbev/msl124.hdl:1885/23220.PMID 16982817.
  21. ^abcdefghijklmnopWen B, Li H, Gao S, Mao X, Gao Y, Li F, et al. (March 2005)."Genetic structure of Hmong-Mien speaking populations in East Asia as revealed by mtDNA lineages".Molecular Biology and Evolution.22 (3):725–734.doi:10.1093/molbev/msi055.PMID 15548747.
  22. ^abcdefghijkComas D, Plaza S, Wells RS, Yuldaseva N, Lao O, Calafell F, et al. (June 2004)."Admixture, migrations, and dispersals in Central Asia: evidence from maternal DNA lineages".European Journal of Human Genetics.12 (6):495–504.doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201160.PMID 14872198.
  23. ^abcdefghijklmnoStarikovskaya EB, Sukernik RI, Derbeneva OA, Volodko NV, Ruiz-Pesini E, Torroni A, et al. (January 2005)."Mitochondrial DNA diversity in indigenous populations of the southern extent of Siberia, and the origins of Native American haplogroups".Annals of Human Genetics.69 (Pt 1):67–89.doi:10.1046/j.1529-8817.2003.00127.x.PMC 3905771.PMID 15638829.
  24. ^Supannee Kaewsutthi, Nopasak Phasukkijwatana, Yutthana Joyjindaet al., "Mitochondrial Haplogroup Background May Influence Southeast Asian G11778A Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy",Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, June 2011, Vol. 52, No. 7
  25. ^abcdTabbada KA, Trejaut J, Loo JH, Chen YM, Lin M, Mirazón-Lahr M, et al. (January 2010)."Philippine mitochondrial DNA diversity: a populated viaduct between Taiwan and Indonesia?".Molecular Biology and Evolution.27 (1):21–31.doi:10.1093/molbev/msp215.PMID 19755666.
  26. ^Peng MS, Quang HH, Dang KP, Trieu AV, Wang HW, Yao YG, et al. (October 2010)."Tracing the Austronesian footprint in Mainland Southeast Asia: a perspective from mitochondrial DNA".Molecular Biology and Evolution.27 (10):2417–2430.doi:10.1093/molbev/msq131.PMID 20513740.
  27. ^Dulik MC, Zhadanov SI, Osipova LP, Askapuli A, Gau L, Gokcumen O, et al. (February 2012)."Mitochondrial DNA Dulik_2012 Y chromosome variation provides evidence for a recent common ancestry between Native Americans and Indigenous Altaians".American Journal of Human Genetics.90 (2):229–46.doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.12.014.PMC 3276666.PMID 22281367.
  28. ^Fuku N, Park KS, Yamada Y, Nishigaki Y, Cho YM, Matsuo H, et al. (March 2007)."Mitochondrial haplogroup N9a confers resistance against type 2 diabetes in Asians".American Journal of Human Genetics.80 (3):407–415.doi:10.1086/512202.PMC 1821119.PMID 17273962.
  29. ^D Miścicka-Sliwka, M Woźniak, I A Zakharov (2003)."Diversity of mitochondrial DNA lineages in South Siberia".Annals of Human Genetics.67 (Pt 5):391–411.doi:10.1046/j.1469-1809.2003.00035.x.PMID 12940914.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^Yoo, Seong-Keun (2019)."Northeast Asian Reference Database (NARD) Imputation Server".
  31. ^Lee HY, Yoo JE, Park MJ, Chung U, Kim CY, Shin KJ (2006)."East Asian mtDNA haplogroup determination in Koreans: Haplogroup-level coding region SNP analysis and subhaplogroup-level control region sequence analysis".Electrophoresis.27 (22):4408–4418.doi:10.1002/elps.200600151.PMID 17058303.
  32. ^Jeon S, Bhak Y, Choi Y, Jeon Y, Kim S, Jang J, et al. (May 2020)."Korean Genome Project: 1094 Korean personal genomes with clinical information".Science Advances.6 (22): eaaz7835.Bibcode:2020SciA....6.7835J.doi:10.1126/sciadv.aaz7835.PMC 7385432.PMID 32766443.
  33. ^Chi-Zao Wang, Xue-Er Yu, Mei-Sen Shi, Hui Li & Shu-Hua Ma (2022)."Whole mitochondrial genome analysis of the Daur ethnic minority from Hulunbuir in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China".BMC Ecology and Evolution.22 (1): 66.doi:10.1186/s12862-022-02019-4.PMC 9118598.PMID 35585500.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  34. ^Taketo U, Rinnosuke H, Kenshi S, Kazuhiko I, Kazumasa S, Kentaro K (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.
  35. ^Ayken Askapuli, Miguel Vilar, Humberto Garcia-Ortiz (2022)."Kazak mitochondrial genomes provide insights into the human population history of Central Eurasia".PLOS ONE.17 (11): e0277771.Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1777771A.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0277771.PMC 9707748.PMID 36445929.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  36. ^Fuku N, Park KS, Yamada Y, Nishigaki Y, Cho YM, Matsuo H, et al. (March 2007)."Mitochondrial haplogroup N9a confers resistance against type 2 diabetes in Asians".American Journal of Human Genetics.80 (3):407–415.doi:10.1086/512202.PMC 1821119.PMID 17273962.
  37. ^Maruyama S, Minaguchi K, Saitou N (August 2003). "Sequence polymorphisms of the mitochondrial DNA control region and phylogenetic analysis of mtDNA lineages in the Japanese population".International Journal of Legal Medicine.117 (4):218–225.doi:10.1007/s00414-003-0379-2.PMID 12845447.S2CID 1224295.
  38. ^abDerenko M, Malyarchuk B, Denisova G, Perkova M, Rogalla U, Grzybowski T, et al. (2012)."Complete mitochondrial DNA analysis of eastern Eurasian haplogroups rarely found in populations of northern Asia and eastern Europe".PLOS ONE.7 (2): e32179.Bibcode:2012PLoSO...732179D.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0032179.PMC 3283723.PMID 22363811.

Sources

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toHaplogroup F (mtDNA).

Phylogenetic tree ofhuman mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups

 Mitochondrial Eve (L)  
L0L1–6 
L1L2 L3  L4L5L6
MN 
CZDEGQ OASR IWXY
CZBFR0 pre-JT P U
HVJTK
HVJT
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Haplogroup_F_(mtDNA)&oldid=1284707783"
Category:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp