- Haplogroup R2 (Y-DNA)
Infobox haplogroup
name =R2
origin-date =25,000 years BP
origin-place =Central Asia orSouth India
ancestor =R
descendants =
mutations =M124
members =Sinti ~50%,
restricted toIran ,Pakistan ,India and southern Central Asia.R2 is a Y-chromosome haplogroup characterized by
genetic marker M124, and is rarely found outside India, Pakistan, Iran, and southern Central Asia.Term history
Before the publication of the 2005 Y-Chromosome Phylogenetic Tree, haplogroup R2 was known as Haplogroup “P1” and formerly thought to be a sister
clade of Haplogroup R rather thanderived from it.Harvcoltxt|Manoukian|2006]Origins
According to
the Genographic Project conducted by theNational Geographic Society , haplogroup R2 arose about 25,000 years ago in southern Central Asia, and its members migrated southward as part of the second [The first consisted of African migrants who traveled along the Indian coastline some 50,000 to 60,000 years ago.] major wave of human migration into India.Citation | contribution = Atlas of the Human Journey | author = National Geographic Society | author-link = National Geographic Society | title = The Genographic Project | publisher = National Geographic Society | place = Washington DC | year = 2005 | contribution-url = https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/atlas.html | url = https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/index.html.]According to Harvcoltxt|Sengupta et al.|2006,
uncertainty neutralizes previous conclusions that the intrusion of HGs R1a1 and R2 from the northwest in Dravidian-speaking southern tribes is attributable to a single recent event. Rather, these HGs contain considerable demographic complexity, as implied by their high haplotype diversity. Specifically, they could have actually arrived in southern India from a southwestern Asian source region multiple times, with some episodes considerably earlier than others.
The following is Manoukian's (2006) summary of the findings of
the Genographic Project conducted by theNational Geographic Society and directed bySpencer Wells :
* Haplogroup R, the ancestral clade to R1 and R2, appeared on the Central Asian Steppes around 35,000 to 30,000 years ago.
* R1, sister clade to R2, moved to the West from the Central Asian Steppes around 35,000 to 30,000 years ago. R1 pockets were established, from where R1a and R1b emerged.
* R2 made its first entry into the Indian sub-continent around 25,000 years ago. The routes taken are not clear, although the Indus and Ganges rivers are possible theories put forward. There could, of course, have been multiple immigrations of this haplogroup into the Indian sub-continent, both in the Paleolithic and the Neolithic.Distribution
At least 90% of R2 individuals are located in the
Indian sub-continent .Harvcoltxt|Manoukian|2006] It is also reported in Caucasian andCentral Asia n populations.In Central Asia,
Tajikistan shows Haplogroup R2 at 6%, while the other '-stan' states vary around 2%.Bartangi s of Tajikistan have a high frequency of R2 at about 17%.This haplogroup is rare among Europeans and non-existent in African, East Asian, Native American and Native Australian populations. Among Europeans there are at least two confirmed clusters of R2 individuals among
Ashkenazi Jews, which may reflect either an Iranian or a Central Asian (Khazar) origin of a portion of this group.Manoukian's (2006) summary of Harvcoltxt|Sengupta et al.|2006 is as follows:
* Haplogroup R2 is present both in Dravidian and Indo-European populations, meaning that R2 has a pan-Indian presence, and not restricted to any linguistic group.
* Haplogroup R2 has a more significant presence in middle and upper castes.
* The frequencies of R2 seem to mirror the frequencies of R1a (i.e. both lineages are strong and weak in the same social and linguistic subgroups). This may indicate that both R1a and R2 moved into India at roughly the same time or co-habited, although more research is needed.
* R1a1 and R2 haplogroups indicate demographic complexity that is inconsistent with a recent single history and is not inconsistent with a more proximal Central Asian input of the R2 haplogroup in the upper castes.
* R2 has a particularly strong presence in the Indian states of West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat, and in the area of Mumbai (Bombay).
* The paper claims that there is no evidence that Central Asia was the source of the R1a and R2 lineages in India. The theory that Central Asia could have been the recipient of the two lineages from India should not be ruled out. In addition, the data are not inconsistent with complex exchanges of this haplogroup between Cental Asia and the Indian sub-continent, with the latter being both the source and the recipient at different times.outh Asia
Haplogroup R2, along with haplogroups H, L, R1a1, and J2, forms the majority of the South Asian male population. The frequency is around 10-15% inIndia andSri Lanka and 7-8% inPakistan . Its spread within South Asia is very extensive, ranging from Baluchistan in the west toBengal in the east;Hunza in the north toSri Lanka in the south.Within South Asia, Sinhalese have a frequency of 38% while West
Bengalis have a frequency of 23%. TheParsee s in Pakistan have this lineage at around 20%. Other South Asian communities that have a reasonably high frequency include Lodha, an Austro-Asiatic tribe in East India, with 35%,Pallan s, a Dravidian community in South India with 14% and Konkanasth or Chitpavan Brahmins of Western India with 26%. The data reported by Sengupta (2006) show a prevalence of 20% (10/51) of this haplogroup in the threeIndo-European -speakingBrahmin gorups (Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Konkanasth). This lineage also forms 5% of Punjabi males. The R2 haplogroup is also found in 14% of theBurusho people who speak the language isolate calledBurushaski [cite journal|title=Y-chromosomal evidence for a limited Greek contribution to the Pathan population of Pakistan|author=Firasat S, Khaliq S, Mohyuddin A, Papaioannou M, Tyler-Smith C, Underhill PA, Ayub Q] .Some of the other studies like Bamshad et al., 2001, Kivisild et al., 2003 found Haplogroup 1(the old representation for non-R1a1 Haplogroup R
subclade s) at around 40% among Telugus of coastalAndhra Pradesh . The identification of this Haplogroup with R2 is confirmed from Sanghamitra Sahoo et al., 2006 study which observed R2 ranging from 35% to 55% among non-Brahmin castes of this region.Haplogroup R2 comprises 53% of Y-
chromosomes amongSinti Roma, a subgroup of the Roma living in Germany who were relocated to Central Asia. This Gypsy tribe has its ancient roots in India.Caucasus
An R2 frequency of 15.8% was observed among
Chechens but may not be representative because thesample size was only 19 individuals. [cite journal | author = Nasidze et al. | year = 2003 | title = Testing hypotheses of language replacement in the Caucasus: evidence from the Y-chromosome | journal = Hum Genet | volume = 112 | pages = 255–261
Harvcoltxt|Manoukian|2006]R2 was found at an unusually high frequency of 44% among
Kurmanji -speakers (Kurmanj s) in Georgia, but at a much lower frequency of 8% amongKurmanj s inTurkmenistan . [cite journal | author = Nasidze et al. | year = 2005 | title = MtDNA and Y-chromosome Variation in Kurdish Groups | journal = Annals of Human Genetics | volume = 69 | pages = 401–412 | doi = 10.1046/j.1529-8817.2005.00174.x]In the Caucasus, around 3% of
Azerbaijanis , 2% ofArmenians , and 1% ofGeorgians belong to the R2 haplogroup. Approximately 1% of Turks also belong to this haplogroup. [Cinnioğlu et al. (2003), " [http://hpgl.stanford.edu/publications/HG_2004_v114_p127-148.pdf Excavating Y-chromosome haplotype strata in Anatolia] ."]Relationship to other haplogroups
R2 is a subgroup of Haplogroup R (M207).
Clade
label1=Haplogroup R
1=Clade
label1=Haplogroup R1
1=Clade
label1=Haplogroup R1a
1=Clade
1=Haplogroup R1a1
2=Haplogroup R1b
2=Haplogroup R2Prediction with Haplotypes
Haplotype can be used to predict haplogroup. The chances of any person part of this haplogroup is the highest if DYS391=10, DYS392=10 and DYS426=12.ee also
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*Genealogical DNA test Notes
References
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*.External links
* [http://www.familytreedna.com/public/india The India Genealogical DNA Project]
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