The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup F2E
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup F2E is a derived branch of haplogroup F2, itself a descendant of haplogroup F, which has deep roots in East and Southeast Asia. Based on its phylogenetic position under F2 and patterns of geographic occurrence, F2E most likely diversified during the early Holocene (roughly ~9 kya), a period of warming, sea-level rise, and major demographic shifts in East and Southeast Asia. Its emergence fits the broader pattern of post-glacial expansions and the spread of early coastal and riverine forager-farmer communities.
Subclades
F2E is a terminal or moderately subdivided lineage within F2 in current phylogenies; detailed internal substructure for F2E is relatively limited in published surveys compared with larger haplogroups. As more complete mitochondrial genomes from under-sampled regions (e.g., island Southeast Asia and Near Oceania) become available, finer subclades of F2E may be resolved, clarifying micro-geographic expansions and founder events.
Geographical Distribution
F2E exhibits a distribution concentrated in East and Southeast Asia, with spillover at low frequencies into island Southeast Asia and parts of Near Oceania. Modern samples showing F2E tend to occur in Han Chinese, various mainland Southeast Asian groups, Koreans and Japanese, and among Austronesian-speaking populations in Taiwan, the Philippines, and Indonesia. Low-frequency occurrences have also been reported in some Central Asian and southern Siberian samples, consistent with long-distance gene flow and recent admixture.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because F2E sits within a maternal lineage that is common in East and Southeast Asia, it is informative for studies of Neolithic demographic change, coastal dispersals, and the later Austronesian expansion. The presence of F2-derived lineages in both mainland and island contexts suggests contributions from coastal hunter-gatherer groups and early rice/cereal farming populations to the maternal ancestry of later communities. In island contexts, F2E can mark local continuity or admixture between incoming Austronesian-speaking farmers and resident groups, depending on regional archaeological and genetic contexts.
Ancient DNA evidence for F2 and related lineages in archaeological contexts, though still limited, supports continuity of some maternal lineages from the late Pleistocene and early Holocene through to the Neolithic and historic periods in parts of East and Southeast Asia.
Conclusion
F2E is a regionally important maternal lineage within the F2 clade that likely arose in the early Holocene in East/Southeast Asia. Its distribution across mainland East Asia, mainland Southeast Asia, and island Southeast Asia — with occasional occurrences in Near Oceania and Central Asia — makes it useful for reconstructing coastal dispersals, Neolithic demographic processes, and the complex admixture history tied to the Austronesian expansion. Continued sampling and full mitogenome sequencing will refine its substructure and demographic history.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion