The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup K*
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup K derives from haplogroup U8b and likely formed in the Near East or Anatolia during the Late Glacial to Early Holocene (~16 kya). The label K* (K star) is used for sequences that fall within haplogroup K but do not belong to any of the well-characterized subclades (for example, K1, K2 and their downstream branches). K* therefore represents either basal K diversity that predates later diversification or lineages that have not yet been resolved into named subclades.
The wider haplogroup K rapidly diversified during the Early Holocene and is strongly associated with populations that participated in the Neolithic transition into Europe. Many of the distinctive modern and ancient patterns associated with K are driven by derived subclades (notably K1 sublineages). In contrast, K* indicates remaining ancestral variation or rare branches that did not expand as dramatically.
Subclades (if applicable)
By definition K* is the set of K-lineages not assigned to named subclades. Well-documented subclades of K include K1 (with many downstream branches found across Europe and West Eurasia) and K2 (and further downstream groups). K* therefore sits outside those resolved branches. As sequencing and phylogenetic resolution improve, some K* sequences may be reclassified into new or existing subclades.
Geographical Distribution
K* is detected at low to moderate frequencies across a broad swath of West Eurasia, reflecting the Near Eastern origin of haplogroup K and subsequent Neolithic expansions. Modern occurrences (and ancient detections) include Anatolia, the Levant and Iran, the Caucasus, southern and western Europe (including Sardinia and other Mediterranean islands), parts of North Africa with Near Eastern contacts, and scattered instances further afield due to historical gene flow.
Importantly, many population-level high frequencies attributed to "K" as a whole (for example in some Ashkenazi Jewish cohorts) are driven by specific subclades rather than K*; true K* lineages are generally rarer and often localized.
Historical and Cultural Significance
The broader haplogroup K is closely tied to the demographic processes of the Early Neolithic: Anatolian/Levantine farming populations carried K lineages into Europe during the Neolithic agricultural dispersals (e.g., Cardial and LBK-related expansions). K* lineages can thus represent either relict maternal diversity from the Near Eastern source populations or less-expanded branches that persisted in certain groups (island populations, isolated communities, or pockets in the Caucasus and Near East).
Because K* is by definition not part of the common downstream founder clades, it is less often implicated in clear founder events (unlike certain K1a subclades prominent among Ashkenazi Jews). However, its presence in archaeological samples of Neolithic and later age provides useful information about the diversity of maternal lineages that accompanied farming and post-Neolithic movements.
Ancient DNA Evidence
K and subclades are well-attested in ancient DNA from Early and Middle Neolithic European sites (e.g., LBK and Cardial contexts), and K* has been identified in a small number of ancient individuals, consistent with a Near Eastern origin and early European dispersal. The relative paucity of K* hits in published ancient datasets likely reflects both true lower frequency compared with derived founder clades and limitations of sampling and phylogenetic resolution.
Conclusion
mtDNA haplogroup K* is a useful label for basal K diversity that complements the well-known K subclades associated with Neolithic farmers and later populations. It highlights residual Near Eastern/Anatolian maternal ancestry and provides a window onto less-expanded maternal lineages; as more complete mitogenomes are sequenced, many K* lineages will likely resolve into named subclades, refining our understanding of postglacial and Neolithic maternal population dynamics.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Ancient DNA Evidence