Nope. Type O blood is a recessive trait. This means you have both the dominant and recessive gene for type O blood in both parents. there is no signal (gene) in either parent to cause type A blood in the offspring.
So does this mean you are going to be posting a question about how to find a divorce lawyer?
The actual blood type of a child is determined by the dominant blood type between the two parents. A and B are both dominant over O, which means a child that receives an A blood type from the father and an O blood type from the mother will have an A blood type.
Subsequently, A and B are considered to be codominant, which means a child inheriting an A blood type from the mother and a B blood type from the father will most likely have an AB blood type. Only two recessive O blood type genes from both parents will result in a child having an O blood type.
Blood group is a trait that is controlled by three alleles rather than two. These alleles are IA, IB and IO. IA and IB are dominant and IO is recessive, thus O type of blood group occur if only homozygous recessive (IOIO)is present. Same way of the alleles are IA and IB then codominacy occurs and there is AB type blood group.
The gametes of AB type persons are IA and IB and the gametes of the O type mother are all IO. One of the gamete from the mother will combine with one gamete of father and the offspring will be formed. Thus two combinataions could occur, either the genotype of the offspring is IAIO and he is the blood group type A or he/she has genotype IBIO and his/her blood group type is B. there is no chance of the combination IOIO in the offspring and there could be no O type child.
Both sets of parents can have B positive blood and still give birth to an O positive child. B positive blood can be BB or BO. If both parents are BO positive, they have a 25% chance of having an O positive child.
For O-blood type to come, the alleles should be identical ---> (ii)
and so the father with A and B, blood types
there genes are : IAi X IBi
and so there is one (i) will come from father and the other (i) from mother
with 25% possibility to be O blood type.
and there is no problem in being O positive because both parents are positive.
No as neither parent has a B allele they cannot passit on to the offspring mother is AO and father is OO
it it possible if someone from either parents' family has had it or haves it because of genes
I am no professional so I may be wrong, but normally the child takes after their father so I think the child will be an O negative.
for sure
Yes. The mother would have to be either B or AB.
You dad can either be O, AB, A,or B and he can be positive or negative.
yes. mother can be ab negative.
the baby may be A or O.
B positive
Yes, a mother with negative and a father with O positive can have a baby with B positive. If they do, the mother must have blood type B or AB.
No, i don't think so.
yes
A, b, ab
yes it will come A positive or B positive
Yes, a mother with negative and a father with O positive can have a baby with B positive. If they do, the mother must have blood type B or AB.
yes it will come A positive or B positive
yes of course
Yes, each parent has all of the genetic components to produce an AB child, in this instance the A bloodgroup of the father and the B bloodgroup of the mother and, they both are Rh positive .