“…Over the past hundreds of years, the TK people gradually migrated southward, driven by various cultural, political, economic, environmental and other relevant factors, and became the majority inhabitants of Southeast Asia [8,13,14]. In light of the complex population history of TK-speaking groups and the important role played in the peopling of East and Southeast Asia, the analyses of genetic variations in TK-speaking populations have been conducted in several studies using different sets of autosomal [15][16][17], X-chromosomal [18,19], Y-chromosomal [20,21], mitochondrial [13,14,[21][22][23] and genome-wide [7,24] markers. Previous studies showed that the Proto-languages of TK and AN might be related [25], and TK people from Thailand are related to AN speakers based on mitogenome sequences [14].…”