No - this is not possible. The child must inherit one allele from each parent. This means that if one parent is AB, they must donate either an A or a B to the child.
This means that the only possible blood types are A, B and AB (depending on whether the other parent is BO or BB). If the parent with B blood type is homozygous, BB, then the child can only be B or AB.
No - this is not possible. The child must inherit one allele from each parent. This means that at least one parent must have a B allele in order for the child to have B-type blood. The only possibilities with B- X AB are B, A or AB.
Ab+ universal receiver o- universal donor blood types: can donate to: can receive from: ab+: ab+: ab+ ab- a+ a- b+ b- o+ o- ab-: ab+ ab-: ab- b- a- o- a+: a+ ab+: a+ a- o+ o- a-: a+ a- ab+ ab-: a- o- b+: b+ ab+: b+ b- o+ o- b-: b- b+ ab- ab+: b- o- 0+: o+ a+ b+ ab+: o- o+ o-: o+ o- a+ a- b+ b- ab+ ab-: o-
No. A and B are dominant blood types and O is recessive. A parent with blood type AB can only donate a dominant A or dominant B. A child with blood type O would need to come from parents with one of the following combinations: A-A, A-B, A-O, B-O, O-O
No. O is recessive. The parents would have to have A and B phenotypes in order for their child to have AB- blood.
It is not possible for two parents with blood types AB and B to have a child with O blood type. A child's blood type is determined by the combination of their parents' genes, and O blood type requires both parents to have at least one O gene.
No. B type can only have B, O, and AB. A child with A blood would have to have at least one parent be A or AB.
No. The child will have either type A or type B blood.
Either A or B; AB and O are impossible.
It is possible if your parents have different blood types. Example, if your father is A with a recessive O, and mother is B with a recessive O, you could easily land up with a O blood group. However, an AB father can have only an A, B or AB child depending on the mothers blood group, but surely NOT 'O.'
To have a B type child with an AB father, the mother must have either B or O blood type. If the mother has B blood type, she can pass on either a B or O allele, while the AB father can pass on either an A or B allele. If the mother has O blood type, she can only pass on an O allele, which would result in a B type child when combined with the B allele from the AB father.
An AB+ and B- couple can't have a child with blood type O. They can have children with blood types A, B, or AB, and can have children with Rh negative or Rh positive blood.
The types of blood include: A, B, AB, and O. (A-, A+, B-, B+, AB-, AB+, O-, O+)