- Haplogroup D (Y-DNA)
Infobox haplogroup
name =D
origin-date =approx. 50,000 BP [http://www.isogg.org/tree/ISOGG_HapgrpD08.html Y-DNA Haplogroup D and its Subclades - 2008] ]
origin-place =Asia Karafet et al. (2008), [http://www.genome.org/cgi/content/abstract/gr.7172008v1 Abstract New Binary Polymorphisms Reshape and Increase Resolution of the Human Y-Chromosomal Haplogroup Tree] , Genome Research, DOI: 10.1101/gr.7172008]
ancestor =DE
descendants =
mutations =M174
members =In
human genetics , Haplogroup D (M174) is aY-chromosome haplogroup . Both D and E also contain theM168 change, which is present in all Y-chromosome haplogroups except A and B.Origins
Haplogroup D is believed to have originated in
Asia some 50,000 years before present. While haplogroup D along with haplogroup E contains the distinctive YAP polymorphism (which indicates their common ancestry), no haplogroup D chromosomes have been found anywhere outside of Asia.Like haplogroup C, D is believed to represent a great coastal migration along southern Asia, from
Arabia toSoutheast Asia and thence northward to populate East Asia. It is found today at high frequency among populations inTibet , theJapanese archipelago , and theAndaman Islands , though curiously not inIndia . The Ainu of Japan and the Jarawa andOnge of the Andaman Islands are notable for possessing almost exclusively Haplogroup D chromosomes, although Haplogroup C3 chromosomes also occur among the Ainu at a frequency of approximately 15%. Haplogroup D chromosomes are also found at low to moderate frequencies among populations ofCentral Asia and northern East Asia as well as the Han andMiao-Yao peoples ofChina and among several minority populations ofSichuan andYunnan that speakTibeto-Burman languages and reside in close proximity to the Tibetans.Unlike haplogroup C, it did not travel from Asia to the New World.
Distribution
Haplogroup D is also remarkable for its rather extreme geographic differentiation, with a distinct subset of Haplogroup D chromosomes being found exclusively in each of the populations that contains a large percentage of individuals whose Y-chromosomes belong to Haplogroup D: Haplogroup D1 among the Tibetans (as well as among the mainland
East Asian populations that display very low frequencies of Haplogroup D Y-chromosomes), Haplogroup D2 among the various populations of theJapanese Archipelago , Haplogroup D3 among the inhabitants of Tibet,Tajikistan and other parts of mountainous southernCentral Asia , and Haplogroup D* (probably another monophyletic branch of Haplogroup D) among the Andaman Islanders. Another type (or types) of Haplogroup D* is found at a very low frequency among the Turkic andMongolic populations ofCentral Asia . This apparently ancient diversification of Haplogroup D suggests that it may perhaps be better characterized as a "super-haplogroup" or "macro-haplogroup."The Haplogroup D Y-chromosomes that are found among populations of the
Japanese Archipelago are particularly distinctive, bearing a complex of at least five individual mutations along an internal branch of the Haplogroup D phylogeny, thus distinguishing them clearly from the Haplogroup D chromosomes that are found among the Tibetans and Andaman Islanders and providing evidence that Y-chromosome Haplogroup D2 was the modal haplogroup in the ancestral population that developed the prehistoric Jōmon culture in the Japanese islands.Subgroups
The
subclade s of Haplogroup D with their defining mutation, according to [http://www.isogg.org/tree/ISOGG_HapgrpD08.html the 2008 ISOGG tree] :*D (M174, 021355)
**D* "Typical ofAndaman Islanders"
**D1 (M15) "Typical of Tibetans, with a moderate distribution throughoutEast Asia "
***D1*
***D1a (N1)
**D2 (M55, M57, M64.1, M179, M359.1 [P41.1] , P37.1, P190, 12f2.2) "Typical of Ainu, Japanese, andRyukyuans "
***D2*
***D2a (M116.1)
****D2a*
****D2a1 (M125)
*****D2a1*
*****D2a1a (P42)
******D2a1a*
******D2a1a1 (P12)
*****D2a1b (022457)
******D2a1b*
******D2a1b1 (formerly D2a1b) (P53.2)
****D2a2 (M151)
****D2a3 (P120)
**D3 (P99)
***D3*
***D3a (formerly D3) (P47) "Typical of Tibetans, with a moderate distribution among some other populations of southernCentral Asia "Notes
See also
*
Haplogroup DE (Y-DNA)
*Haplogroup E (Y-DNA) External links
* [https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/atlas.html?card=my029 Spread of Haplogroup D] , from "
National Geographic "
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