Someone with type B blood can receive type O blood during a transfusion.
If someone inherits one A allele for blood type and one B allele for blood type, what will that person's blood type be?
because if u have a different blood type than someone else (except for O+) and u use their blood u could get really sick or even die.
Can B+ type blood be transfused into O type blood in humans?
They will be fine because I know someone who has tried it.
A person who is heterozygous for Type B blood has the genotype I^B i, where I^B represents the allele for Type B blood and i represents the allele for Type O blood. This means they carry one allele for Type B and one for Type O. As a result, they express the Type B blood phenotype due to the presence of the dominant I^B allele.
Each blood type has it's identifying proteins, and will reject blood with the wrong proteins. Type A blood is anti-B, type B blood is anti-A, type O blood has both, and type AB blood has neither. Imagine if someone with AB blood tried to donate to someone with A. AB blood has identifying proteins A and B. The type A blood would recognize the B proteins and kill the cells. The same thing would happen with B, which would recognize the A proteins and kill the cells. Type O blood would recognize and reject both the A and B proteins and reject them. However, if someone who is type AB gives to AB people, their blood does not destroy neither protein A nor B, so it would accept it.
No...someone with a B blood type has anti-A antibodies so the A blood type in the AB blood would cause clotting.
No, type B blood does not have A antigens. Type B blood has B antigens.
There are three alleles for blood type: IA=Blood type A IB=Blood type B i=Blood type O The alleles for blood type A and B are codominant so when someone contains the IA and IB alleles, their blood type is AB.
If someone with type A blood received a transfusion of type B blood, their immune system would likely recognize the type B blood as foreign and attack it. This could lead to a severe immune reaction, causing symptoms such as fever, chills, and potentially life-threatening complications. It is important for blood transfusions to be carefully matched to the recipient's blood type to prevent such reactions.
The short answer is that the Type B patient has antigens for that specific blood type, so when type A is mixed with the type B, the antibodies in the B blood kill the A blood cells, making it useless.
Yes, someone with blood type B negative can donate blood to someone who is O positive. Blood type O is known as the universal blood donor because it can be transfused to patients with any blood type, while type B negative blood is considered a universal plasma donor, meaning the plasma can be transfused to patients of any blood type.