Yes, Type O is the unmutated blood type, we all have a recessive gene for type O because it is the first blood type had by humans.
The possibilities include B positive, B negative, O positive, O negative.
B positive or negative or, O positive or negative.
No, O positive and B positive parents cannot have a B negative child. A child with B negative blood type must inherit a B allele from both parents, which is not possible in this scenario as the O positive parent does not carry the B allele.
The groups are: A negative A positive B negative B positive AB negative AB positive O Negative O positive
O negative can only be given to individuals with O negative blood type. B positive can be given to individuals with B positive and AB positive blood types.
To create a B positive blood type, the blood types that can combine are B and either O or B.
There is no blood type OE. There are 8 different blood types, A positive and negative, B positive and negative, O positive and negative, and AB positive and negative.
No
A person who is B positive will have B antigens on their red blood cells and anti-A antibodies in their plasma. This blood type is compatible for transfusion with B positive, B negative, O positive, and O negative blood types.
yes.
Not exactly. Human blood may have positive (ca. 80%) or negative (remaining 20%) Rhesus factor. It means that that a substance known as Rhesus factor is either found or not in a human blood test. Transfusion of "positive" blood to a "negative" recipient may result in very negative consequences (but not vise versa) . A problem known as Rhesus conflict may arise when a Rhesus-negative woman is pregnant with a Rhesus-positive baby.The name Rhesus factor comes from Rhesus monkey in which it was first found.
Yes. They can have B+, B-, O+, and O-.