No. If you do a Mendel's cross the possibility is 0%. You need a "b" donor. The answer is an emphatic NO!
A & B are codominant alleles and O is a recessive allele.
Allele Combinations:
BB = B Bllood Type
AA = A
AB = AB
BO = B
AO = A
OO = O
Mother = AA or AO
Father = OO
There is no B allele to inherit from either parent.
Therefore, it is impossible for these two parents to produce a child with Type AB Blood.
TGHMD
No.
A man with blood type AB means he has the genotype AB. An O blood type requires 2 O alleles - one from each parent. The man does not have an O allele to give. Only the following people have the possibility of producing an O type child: AO, BO, or OO.
A person who is blood type AB, cannot have a child that is type O. They could have a child who is A, B, or AB, but not type O.
Yes, if the mother is type O or if the child received the recessive traits of other family members.
No
Absolutely. A child will either have its mother's blood type or its father's blood type. If the mother's blood type is NOT O, then someone else is the father.
Yes! You could produce a child with either A or B blood.
Yes, even though the father is blood type O he could father an O child, A child, or B child.
No. The mother only has type O antigens and the father has type B (and possibly O). Neither of them could have supplied the type A antigens to the child.
no
They could be anything depending on the parental genotype.
No he could however be the father of the type a child
The child's blood type could be B positive or O positive.
the child blood type will be A the child could be type A or O
Yes, the child's blood type can be B if the father has o.
The child could either be blood type A or blood type B.
Yes, as long as the mother has a strong A blood type