The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup B5*
Origins and Evolution
Haplogroup B5* represents unclassified or basal lineages within mtDNA haplogroup B5, itself a descendant of macro-haplogroup B. Based on phylogenetic position and coalescent estimates for B5 as a whole, B5* most likely arose in East-to-Southeast Asia approximately 18 kya (Late Pleistocene to early Holocene). The lineage diversified in mainland East and Southeast Asia during the climatic amelioration after the Last Glacial Maximum and contributed maternally to both inland and coastal populations during the Holocene.
B5 lineages have been implicated in patterns of regional continuity in mainland East and Southeast Asia as well as in later maritime dispersals associated with Austronesian expansion out of Taiwan and island Southeast Asia. The presence of B5* (unresolved B5 lineages) in modern and limited ancient samples indicates survival of basal diversity alongside more derived B5 subclades.
Subclades
By definition, B5* denotes samples assigned to haplogroup B5 but not resolved into named downstream subclades (for example B5a, B5b, etc., where those clades exist). Known derived subclades of B5 (B5a, B5b, and their sublineages) show varying geographic affinities across East and Southeast Asia and into Island Southeast Asia and Near Oceania. Because B5* includes basal/unresolved lineages, it is informative about early diversity within the B5 radiation and can represent either rare relict maternal lines or undersampled branches.
Geographical Distribution
B5 and B5* are concentrated in mainland East Asia and mainland/insular Southeast Asia, with measurable frequencies among Han Chinese and other East Asian groups, multiple Southeast Asian populations (Vietnamese, Thai, Burmese, Malay), indigenous Taiwanese, and some Austronesian-speaking communities in Island Southeast Asia and parts of Remote Oceania. Low-frequency occurrences have been reported in Near Oceania and among coastal groups involved in Holocene maritime mobility. The geographic pattern is consistent with an origin on the East Asian mainland followed by both inland continuity and coastal/island dispersals associated with later Holocene population movements.
Historical and Cultural Significance
B5 lineages (including B5*) track important demographic processes in East and Southeast Asia: postglacial resettlement, local continuity of hunter–gatherer and early farming groups in Indochina, and participation in Austronesian maritime expansions that spread maternal lineages into Island Southeast Asia, Taiwan, and parts of the Pacific. The detection of B5 in archaeological contexts (including the single ancient DNA sample reported for B5* in the provided database) supports a long-term presence of this lineage through the Holocene. The haplogroup is therefore useful in reconstructing maternal ancestry of coastal and island dispersals as well as regional demographic continuity.
Conclusion
mtDNA B5* is a basal component of the broader B5 clade that preserves early maternal diversity in East and Southeast Asia. Its distribution and phylogenetic position make it a marker of Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene regional continuity and of later coastal and Austronesian-associated dispersals. Continued sampling and ancient DNA recovery will clarify how much surviving B5* diversity represents relict Paleolithic/Early Holocene branches versus undersampled derived clades.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion