The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup B5B*
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup B5B* (often written B5b* when designating basal branches not assigned to downstream subclades) is a sublineage of the broader maternal clade B5, itself part of macro-haplogroup B. Based on phylogenetic position and coalescence estimates for B5 lineages, B5B likely diversified in mainland East–Southeast Asia during the early Holocene (around 12 kya). The early Holocene timing is consistent with population expansions associated with post-glacial demographic changes, coastal resource intensification, and the later development of Neolithic economies in parts of the region.
Subclades
B5B* refers to lineages within B5B that have not been assigned to named downstream subclades or that fall basal to those subclades. Where downstream branches of B5B exist, they are typically detected at varying frequencies across East and Southeast Asian populations and in island groups reached by maritime expansions. The asterisk (*) designation indicates either a lack of further resolved private mutations in the tested sample or that the sample predates or is outside of known named subclades.
Geographical Distribution
B5B is primarily found in mainland East Asia and Southeast Asia, with secondary occurrences in Island Southeast Asia and selected Near Oceanian communities.* The lineage appears in diverse population samples: Han Chinese and other East Asian groups, multiple Southeast Asian ethnic groups (e.g., Vietnamese, Thai, Burmese, Malay peoples), indigenous Taiwanese Austronesian-speaking groups, and some Austronesian-speaking Pacific Islanders and Island Southeast Asian populations (Borneo, Sulawesi, Lesser Sundas). Its presence in island and coastal populations is consistent with Holocene coastal and maritime dispersals, including the later Austronesian expansion that carried some B-lineages into Island SE Asia and parts of Near Oceania.
Two ancient DNA occurrences assigned to B5B in available datasets indicate that the lineage has been recovered from archaeological contexts, supporting its antiquity and regional continuity through the Holocene.
Historical and Cultural Significance
- Coastal and maritime dispersals: The geographic pattern of B5B*—concentrated in mainland East and Southeast Asia and present at lower frequencies in Island Southeast Asia and Near Oceania—matches models of early Holocene coastal population growth followed by later Neolithic and Bronze Age maritime expansions (including Austronesian dispersals).
- Austronesian connections: B5B* is detected in some indigenous Taiwanese and Island Southeast Asian groups, linking it to maternal lineages that contributed, alongside other B and M clades, to the genetic substrate carried by Austronesian-speaking communities during the Late Holocene.
- Mainland continuity: The presence of B5B* among mainland East and Southeast Asian agricultural and foraging groups suggests long-term regional persistence and local diversification rather than being solely a product of later island-to-mainland gene flow.
Conclusion
mtDNA B5B* represents a Holocene-age maternal lineage rooted in East–Southeast Asia that illustrates both inland continuity and maritime dispersal processes that shaped the genetic landscape of coastal East and Southeast Asia and parts of Island Southeast Asia. Its distribution and occurrences in ancient samples make it a useful marker for studying early Holocene demography, coastal adaptations, and the maternal components of Austronesian-related movements.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion