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CLADE/SUBCLADE SYMBOLS: Added Redefined |
SNP SYMBOLS: Not on 2007 tree Confirmed within subclade Provisional Private |
J 12f2.1,
M304, P209, S6, S34, S35
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J* -
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J1 M267
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J1* -
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J1a M62
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J1b M365
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J1c M390 (formerly J1e)
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J1d P56
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J1e P58
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J1e* -
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J1e1 M367, M368 (formerly J1c)
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J1e2 M369 (formerly J1d)
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J2 M172
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J2* -
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J2a M410
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J2a* -
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J2a1
DYS413≤18, S57
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J2a1* -
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J2a1a M47, M322
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J2a1b M67/S51
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J2a1b* -
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J2a1b1 M92, M260
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J2a1b1* -
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J2a1b1a M327
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J2a1b2 M163, M166
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J2a1c M68
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J2a1d M158
(formerly J2a1e)
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J2a1e M319
(formerly J2a1h)
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J2a1f M339
(formerly J2a1i)
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J2a1g M419
(formerly J2a1j)
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J2a1h
DYS445≤7 (formerly J2a1k - see Note below)
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J2a1h* -
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J2a1h1 M137
(formerly J2a1d)
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J2a1h2 M289 (formerly J2a1f)
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J2a1h3 M318
(formerly J2a1g)
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J2a1i P81
(location beneath DYS413≤18, S57 not certain)
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J2a1j P279
(location beneath DYS413≤18, S57 not certain)
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J2a2 M340
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J2b M12, M102,
M221, M314 (M102 relocated from J2b1)
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J2b* -
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J2b1 M205
(formerly J2b1b)
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J2b2 M241
(formerly J2b1a)
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J2b2* -
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J2b2a M99
(formerly J2b1a1)
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J2b2b M280
(formerly J2b1a2)
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J2b2c M321
(formerly J2b1a3)
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J2b2d P84
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J2b2e DYS455≤9
(new)
Caveats for the information from Karafet et al (2008):
NOTES:
Y-DNA haplogroup J evolved in the ancient Near East and was carried into North Africa, Europe, Central Asia, Pakistan and India. J2 lineages originated in the area known as the Fertile Crescent. The main spread of J2 into the Mediterranean area is thought to have coincided with the expansion of agricultural peoples during the Neolithic period. The timing of the demographic events that brought J2 to Central Asia, Pakistan, and India is not yet known. J1 lineages may have a more southern origin, as they are more often found in the Levant region, other parts of the Near East, and North Africa, with a sparse distribution in the southern Mediterranean flank of Europe, and in Ethiopia.
There is a descending gradient in the frequency of occurrence of haplogroup J from the Middle East toward the northwest of Europe, reaching about 3% of the population on the northwest Atlantic coast. The occurrence of J in Europe is undoubtedly due both to the Neolithic expansion and to episodic migrations, though the relative proportion of those two sources is controversial and may not be the same in different locations.
A significant fraction of Jews belong to haplogroup J, but Jews represent a small minority of the European members of the haplogroup. The "Cohen Modal Haplotype" is a specific set of six Y-STR marker values that occurs in both J1 and J2, though at a much higher frequency in J1.
References:
Alonso et al,
The Place of the Basques in the European
Y-chromosome Diversity Landscape. (available by subscription) European Journal of
Human Genetics, 13:1293-1302, 2005.
Athey T W, Schrack B E,
A New Subclade of Y Haplogroup J2b. (pdf)
Journal of Genetic Genealogy, 4(1):27-34, 2008.
Behar et al,
Contrasting Patterns of Y Chromosome Variation in Ashkenazi Jewish and Host
Non-Jewish European Populations. (pdf) Hum Genet 114:354-365, 2004.
Capelli et al,
Population Structure in the Mediterranean Basin: A Y Chromosome Perspective. (pdf)
Annals of Human Genetics, 2005.
Cinnioglu et al,
Excavating Y-chromosome Haplotype Strata in Anatolia. (pdf) Human Genetics. 114:127-148, 2004.
Cruciani et al,
A Back Migration from Asia to Sub-Saharan Africa Is Supported
by High-Resolution Analysis of Human Y-Chromosome Haplotypes. (pdf)
American Journal of Human Genetics, 70:1197-1214, 2002.
Cruciani et al,
Tracing Past Human Male
Movements in Northern/Eastern Africa and Western Eurasia: New Clues from Y-Chromosomal
Haplogroups E-M78 and J-M12. (pdf) Molecular Biology and Evolution 24(6):1300-1311, 2007.
Di Giacomo et al, Y Chromosomal Haplogroup J
as a Signature of the Post-Neolithic Colonization of Europe. (pdf) Human Genetics,
115:357-371, 2004.
Flores et al,
Reduced Genetic Structure of the Iberian Peninsula Revealed by Y-chromosome
Analysis: Implications for Population Demography. (available by subscription)
European Journal of Human Genetics,
12:855-863, 2004.
Karafet et al,
New Binary Polymorphisms Reshape and Increase Resolution of the Human Y-Chromosomal Haplogroup
Tree. Abstract. Genome Research, published online April 2, 2008.
Supplementary Material.
Karafet et al,
Paternal Population History of East Asia: Sources, Patterns,
and Microevolutionary Processes. (pdf) American Journal of Human Genetics,
69:615-628, 2001.
King et al,
Differential Y-chromosome Anatolian Influences on the Greek and Cretan Neolithic. (abstract)
Annals of Human Genetics. 72:205�214. 2008.
Kivisild et al,
The Genetic Heritage of the Earliest Settlers Persists in Both Indian Tribal and Caste
Populations. (pdf) American Journal of Human Genetics, 72:313-332, 2003.
Myres et al, (2007),
Y-chromosome Short Tandem Repeat DYS458.2 Non-concensus Alleles Occur Independently in Both Binary
Haplogroups J1-M267 and R1b3-M405. Croatian Medical Journal, 48, 2007.
Nasidze et al,
MtDNA and Y-chromosome Variation in Kurdish Groups. (abstract) Annals of Human Genetics,
69:401-412, 2005.
Regueiro et al,
Iran: Tricontinental Nexus for Y-Chromosome Driven Migration. (abstract)
Human Heredity, Vol. 61, No 3, 132-143, 2006.
Semino et al,
Ethiopians and Khoisan Share the Deepest Clades of the Human Y-Chromosome Phylogeny. (pdf)
American Journal of Human Genetics, 70:265-268, 2002.
Semino et al,
Origin, Diffusion, and Differentiation of Y-Chromosome Haplogroups E and J: Inferences on the
Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area. (pdf) American
Journal of Human Genetics, 74:1023-1034, 2004.
Sengupta et al,
Polarity and Temporality of High Resolution Y-chromosome Distributions in India
Identify Both Indigenous and Exogenous Expansions and Reveal Minor Genetic Influence
of Central Asian Pastoralists. (pdf)
American Journal of Human Genetics, 78:202-221, 2006.
Shen et al, Reconstruction
of Patrilineages and Matrilineages of Samaritans and other Israeli Populations from Y-Chromosome
and Mitochondrial DNA Sequence Variation. (pdf) Human Mutation, 24:248-260, 2004.
Zalloua et al,
Y Chromosome Diversity in Lebanon is Structured by Recent Historical Events. (abstract)
The American Journal of Human Genetics, Volume 82, Issue 4, 873-882, 28 March 2008.
Additional Resources:
Dennis Garvey,
Y Haplogroup J
Andreas O., The M410 Project
Bonnie Schrack and Jeff Schweitzer,
The Y-Haplogroup J DNA Project
Roman Sychev, The J2b-M102 DNA Project
Costa Tsirigakis,
J2 Y DNA group
Corrections/Additions made since 31 December 2007:
Contact People for Haplogroup J: Bonnie Schrack or Whit Athey
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