hemophilia
Rh negative is a recessive trait but if both parents had it, then the children would have it.
Type 'O' blood is a recessive factor, which means that it can't be hiding anymore recessive factors hiding so no its not impossible.
There are two types of hemophilia. Type A: A mutation in the factor VIII gene. Type B: A mutation in the IX gene.
By using capital & lowercase T's. The capital T represents the factor responsible for the dominant trait: tall. The lowercase representing the factor of the recessive trait: short.
a recessive allele
No. If both parents are Rh negative, they are homozygous recessive for the Rh factor and can only pass on recessive alleles to their children, and a positive Rh factor is a dominant trait.
dominant is a genetic factor that blocks another genetic factor. recessive is a genetic factor that is blocked by the presence of a dominant factor.
hemophilia
A dominant trait is a genetic factor that blocks another genetic factor. A recessive trait is a genetic factor that is blocked by the presence of a dominant fact
The disorder is controlled by a recessive factor.
Yes, if both carry the rH neg factor as a recessive.
The Rh factor exhibits normal dominant/recessive patterns. In contrast, the ABO antigens express codominance.
Rh negative is a recessive trait but if both parents had it, then the children would have it.
Type 'O' blood is a recessive factor, which means that it can't be hiding anymore recessive factors hiding so no its not impossible.
Yes. The father could be carrying a recessive gene for a negative Rh factor. Obviously, the mother carries only the recessive genes.
There are two types of hemophilia. Type A: A mutation in the factor VIII gene. Type B: A mutation in the IX gene.