Yes it is possibke. I am a living example. My blood group is B+ and my genotype is AA.
Regardless of blood type any food is good for a person. If their blood group genotype is AA and they are B+ then something is very wrong, and a mistake was made in testing.
This would depend on what the genotype is of the parents. They could have children with type A, B, AB, or O type blood. This is possible if they are both heterozygous if they are homozygous for their respective blood types they could only have AB children. Also the statistics for the blood types would change if one parent was homozygous and one parent were heterozygous.
A positive and A1 positive (usually written as A plus sign and A1 plus sign) refers to the antigens in the blood. People with the A blood type contain A antigens. People with A positive blood refers to the presence of both A antigens and Rh-positive antigens.
genotype refers to the set of alleles. phenotype refers to how the characteristics manifest themselves. e.g phenotype- blue eyes genotype- bb
Absolutely not. Blood tests exist so that couples will not be at risk for HIV, AIDS or other diseases.
Regardless of blood type any food is good for a person. If their blood group genotype is AA and they are B+ then something is very wrong, and a mistake was made in testing.
yes it is possible if one person in parent with A blood group
Yes - AB Parent has genotype IA IB . If the parent with B blood has the genotype IBi, which is entirely possible, then there is a chance that the baby would be IAi, and would have type A blood. Plus/minus has to do with the RH factor in blood, so you can't tell from the information given whether the baby could be "plus". If one of the parents is RH+, the baby could be as well.
Yes. Both A and B are "dominant" genes, so if the parents have the genotype AO and BO, then there's a 1/4 chance the child will have genotype OO.
It is possible. It depends on the blood group of the mother.
Yes. There are two possible genotypes for a person with type B blood: BB or BO. If a person with the BB genotype has children with a person with type O blood, then all of their children will have type B blood. But, it the person has the BO genotype, then any child they have will have a 50% chance of having type O blood.
All child's blood type will be O.mostly they will be positive, but they can have a negative child with a low percentage reaches to 25% ( if both parent genotype are heterogeneous ).
of course.
Yes. Blood type should not be a factor in who you marry.
yes
If both parents have genotype AO, it is possible to have a type O child, but this is very rare.
It is not possible for that to happen, blood group O is recessive to A and B and in order for a person to have O blood group, they would have to be homozygous recessive. This means that the mother's alleles for blood group is OO and the father's allele's for blood group is also OO; which means that there are no other alleles other than O that they can be given to an offspring. That's Impossible.