The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup M40
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup M40 is a downstream lineage within haplogroup M4, itself a South Asian branch of macro-haplogroup M. Given M4's Upper Paleolithic presence in South Asia (~25 kya), M40 likely arose later as a regional diversification of indigenous maternal lineages; molecular-clock estimates and phylogenetic position make an origin in the late Upper Paleolithic to early Holocene plausible (on the order of ~10–15 kya). M40 represents one of several regional clades that reflect long-term continuity of maternal lineages within the subcontinent rather than recent exogenous introductions.
Subclades (if applicable)
Population-level surveys and phylogenies indicate limited internal structure in M40 compared with some larger M subclades. Some studies and sequence repositories show one or a small number of distinguishable sub-lineages (reportedly labelled in the literature as M40a / M40b or similar systematics), usually localized to particular regions or ethnolinguistic groups. These subclades are typically low-frequency and show regional clustering, consistent with genetic drift and founder effects in small or isolated populations (for example tribal groups or upland communities).
Geographical Distribution
M40 is concentrated in South Asia, with highest frequency and diversity found across the Indian subcontinent — both among tribal (indigenous) groups and broader caste and general-population samples. It is also detected, at lower frequencies, in neighbouring regions: the Himalayan foothills and some Tibetan-adjacent populations, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh/eastern India, and sporadically in Myanmar, Southeast Asia and Central Asia. Ancient DNA from Holocene-era South Asian contexts has recovered related M4-derived lineages, supporting an enduring presence in the region.
Historical and Cultural Significance
As a regional maternal lineage, M40 is best interpreted as part of the indigenous South Asian maternal substrate that predates many documented archaeological cultures of the late Holocene. Its distribution and frequency patterns suggest continuity across the transition from Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherer groups into Holocene foragers and early agricultural communities. While M40 itself is not diagnostic of specific archaeological complexes, it plausibly contributed maternally to populations associated with Neolithic-era subsistence shifts in South Asia and continued through Bronze Age and historic-period populations (including the Indus urban communities and later regional groups) at low to moderate frequencies.
Conclusion
Haplogroup M40 is a South Asian M4-derived maternal lineage that illustrates local diversification within macro-haplogroup M after the initial peopling of South Asia. Its restricted geographic focus, modest internal substructure, and presence across tribal, caste, Himalayan and island (Sri Lankan) populations make it a useful marker of deep maternal ancestry in the subcontinent and of population continuity from the late Pleistocene into the Holocene.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion