It depends on the mother's genotype. O blood is recessive, so the father has OO blood. Both A and B are dominant, so an AA or AO genotype would result in a type A blood phenotype. Since the father is homozygous recessive, he must donate an O. Therefore, for the child to be type A, the mother must donate an A to create an AO genotype for the child. So, if the mother has type A blood or type AB blood, the child could have type A blood.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Possible blood types are A, B, or AB. Basically, the offspring can be any blood type except for O.
O
Yes, an individual with blood type B can produce an offspring with blood type A. The explanation for this is that a mother with the blood type A can have a child with a father who has a blood type of A or AB and produce a child with type A blood.
If the father is homozygous for the B blood group, giving him the BB blood genotype, and the mother's genotype is AB (the only genotype for the AB blood group), then their offspring could have either the AB or B blood groups. If the father is heterozygous for the B blood group, giving him the BO genotype, then their offspring could have the AB, A, or B blood groups. However, they could not produce an offspring with the O blood group.
It depends on if one or both parents carry type O. If they do not, then the only type will be AB. If they do carry O, then the offspring can be AO, AB, BO or OO.
A, B, AB, O ---> all of them