Description

Mitochondrial haplogroup K is a subclade of U8 found commonly across Europe, the Near East, and notably among Ashkenazi Jews (~32%). Three specific K subclades — K1a1b1a, K1a9, and K2a2 — are widely regarded as founding lineages of the Ashkenazi Jewish maternal gene pool, indicating that a remarkably small number of women — possibly as few as four — contributed to the maternal ancestry of most Ashkenazi Jews alive today. This pattern reflects the severe population bottleneck that characterised the establishment of Ashkenazi Jewish communities in medieval Europe. K is also associated with Neolithic farmer ancestry and spread into Europe with agricultural populations from Anatolia.

Interesting Fact

Ötzi the Iceman — the 5,300-year-old Alpine mummy — belongs to haplogroup K1c1, and genetic analysis showed his closest modern relatives are found not near his discovery site in the Alps, but in Sardinia and isolated Alpine villages, revealing how dramatically European genetic landscapes have been reshaped since the Neolithic.

Distribution by Ethnicity

Ethnic distribution Region Frequency Sample
Ashkenazi Jews Europe / Near East
32%
Druze Near East
15%
Armenians South Caucasus
10%
Near Easterners Near East
8%
British Western Europe
7%
Europeans (average) Europe
6%

Associated Clans & Tribes

Clan
Ashkenazi Jewish community
Europe
Three K subclades (K1a1b1a, K1a9, K2a2) are founding maternal lineages of the Ashkenazi Jewish population
Family
Levantine populations
Near East
K is found at moderate frequencies across Levantine and Anatolian populations, reflecting shared Neolithic ancestry

Tags

References

  1. Behar et al. (2006) — The matrilineal ancestry of Ashkenazi Jewry: portrait of a recent founder event. American Journal of Human Genetics 78(3), 487–497.
  2. Keller et al. (2012) — New insights into the Tyrolean Iceman's origin and phenotype as inferred by whole-genome sequencing. Nature Communications 3, 698.
  3. Costa et al. (2013) — A substantial prehistoric European ancestry amongst Ashkenazi maternal lineages. Nature Communications 4, 2543.