My daughter is AB negative , I am B positive and her dad it A negative
An AB- person has neither A, B or Rh antibodies in their plasma. On the red blood cell, there are A, B antigens and no Rh (or D) antigens.
Yes, type A blood has A antigens.
A person with A negative blood can donate blood to a person with A negative blood and a person with AB negative blood.
Type AB blood contains both A and B antigens. This allows the person to receive blood from types A, B, O, and AB.
antigens A+ (:
Blood of animals contaion a factor known as Rh factor which was first discovered in Rehsus monkey, so name Rh and if it is present blood is called Rh+ of positive and if not then Rh-ve or negative simply.....
Human blood contains antigens. Antigens can make one person allergic to the blood from another person. There are two main antigens, A and B. A person without either has type O blood. So a person can have type A blood, type B, or type O. Also a person can have a combination of A and B antigens and have type AB blood. In addition blood has an Rh factor, which can be positive or negative. So a person can be A positive or A negative, O positive or O negative, and so forth. B+ simply means a person has type B blood and is Rh positive.
Human blood contains antigens. Antigens can make one person allergic to the blood from another person. There are two main antigens, A and B. A person without either has type O blood. So a person can have type A blood, type B, or type O. Also a person can have a combination of A and B antigens and have type AB blood. In addition blood has an Rh factor, which can be positive or negative. So a person can be A positive or A negative, O positive or O negative, and so forth. B+ simply means a person has type B blood and is Rh positive.
Co-dominant alleles are both expressed, because both are translated into RNA. One of the best examples of co-dominance is human A/B blood type. The thing that differentiates A and B blood types is the antigens found on the surface of the blood cells. A person with two alleles for A-type antigens will have only A-type antigens, and a person with two B-type alleles will have only B-type antigens. However, a person with one A-type allele and one B-type allele will have blood type AB. A third allele, O-type, has no antigens on the surface of blood cells, and so is only "expressed" in the phenotype if a person has two O-type alleles (and therefore no antigens on their blood cells.)
Blood types are based on having a or b antigens or neither a or b antigens in your blood. Race plays a role in blood typing, and between 16% to 40% of people have type a blood. Blood types are further broken down to positive and negative rh factors. In order to find out which blood type a person has, a simple blood test is used that will show not only the antigens but also the rh factor found in a person's blood.
A universal donor can donate to any blood type. The only universal donor is 0 negative because it doesn't have an antigens. Antigens are things that fight off foreign objects in your body, like white blood cells. A universal recipient can receive any type of blood. The only universal recipient is AB positive.
rh-negative
O negative blood is the universal donor and can be given to any person with any type of blood. Other blood types can not do this because their antigens.
they have AB blood because it has antigens
Yes, type A blood has A antigens.
O negative is the universal donor because it does not contain any antigens (markers). When you get donated blood it has to have the same antigens as the ones your own blood contains. Since O- does not have any antigens, it will be accepted by any blood type.
No it can't. A person with 0 positive blood, has Rhesus D antigens on its red bloodcells. There can't just come off :) RV
No, type B blood does not have A antigens. Type B blood has B antigens.