The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup HV15
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup HV15 is an intermediate subclade within the HV phylogeny, placed under the parent clade HVB (which itself derives from the broader HV/HV0/H macro-clade). The HV macro-clade traces to West Eurasia and the Near East after the Last Glacial Maximum, and many of its downstream lineages expanded during the Late Glacial and postglacial periods and again with Neolithic and later demographic events. HV15 appears to be a relatively young, low-frequency lineage compared with major HV-derived haplogroups such as H and V. Based on the branching structure of HV and the relative scarcity of HV15 in published databases, a conservative estimate places the origin of HV15 in the early Holocene (approximately 6–10 kya), likely in or near the Near East/Caucasus where several HV subclades show deep diversity.
Subclades
As an intermediate clade under HVB, HV15 may contain one or more minor downstream branches in high-resolution phylogenies, but current public sampling and Phylotree-level resolution indicate that HV15 is not a large, widely diversified clade. Many reported occurrences are singletons or low-count lineages in population screens. Additional full mitogenome sequencing and targeted sampling in the Near East and Caucasus would be required to robustly characterize internal subclades and to refine coalescence times.
Geographical Distribution
HV15 is best characterized as a West Eurasian maternal lineage with a patchy distribution. Published and publicly available mtDNA datasets and regional surveys find HV-derived lineages most commonly in the Near East, Anatolia, the Caucasus and southern Europe. HV15 specifically has been observed at low frequencies among populations in the Caucasus (Armenia, Georgia), Anatolia (Turkey), the broader Iranian plateau and sporadically in the Balkans and southern Italy. The pattern is consistent with a Near Eastern/Caucasus origin followed by limited dispersal into neighboring regions during the Neolithic and later prehistoric periods.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because HV15 is rare, it does not define major prehistoric migrations by itself, but its distribution is informative when viewed alongside other HV lineages. The broader HV clade is associated with postglacial recolonization of Europe from refugia in the Near East/Caucasus and with the spread of Neolithic farming communities. Therefore, HV15 likely rode along small-scale demographic movements tied to Neolithic Anatolian/Levantine farmer expansions, later Bronze Age interactions across Anatolia and the Balkans, and localized continuity in the Caucasus.
Conclusion
HV15 is an understudied, low-frequency mtDNA lineage nested under HVB that most likely arose in the Near East or Caucasus in the early Holocene and now occurs at low levels across several West Eurasian populations. The haplogroup's current profile underscores the need for more mitogenome sequencing in the Near East, Anatolia and the Caucasus to resolve its internal structure, refine its age, and better document its historical movements.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion