antigen a and b and they have no antibodies.
A, B, and Rh
Agglutinogen A and Agglutinogen B
Nothing is wrong because blood AB has antigen A and B.
Type A blood has the A antigen and the Antibody anti- B Type B blood has the B antigen and the Antibody anti-a Type AB has antigens AB Type O blood has no antigens, and both the antibodies anti-a and anti-b AB is the universal receiver and O is the universal donor.
Blood type has to do with the antigens found on the surface of your red blood cells. Type A has the A antigen, type B has the B antigen, type AB has both, and type O has neither.
Your blood type is determined by what type of antigen you have in your body. Each person has different antigen's or lack there of in the blood. A blood test is used to determine what these are.
Blood type A have antigen A and anti- body B Blood type B have antigen B and anti- body A Blood type AB have antigens A and B and no anti- body Blood type O do not have antigen but have anti- bodies A and B
Type AB blood doed not contain any antibodies. I does have Antigens A and B.
blood type A have antigen A and anti body B blood type B have antigen B and anti body A blood type AB have antigens A and B and do not have anti body blood type O do not have antigen but have anti bodies A and B
Previous answer: 0 blood type has no antigens.My improved answer: the Bombay phenotype has no antigens.O blood group has H antigens (but does not have A or B antigens), whereas in the Bombay phenotype blood group, even the H antigens are absent.Glenn LowNUS Life Sciences Studentsimmune system
blood groop o has no antigen
Why not? If a mother is type AB, it means she has A and B antigens in her and zero antibodies. If the father is type A, B, or AB, there is a chance that the child can be type AB. It all depends on luck. If the father is type A, and he happens to donate that antigen, and the mother happens to donate the B antigen in her body, then voila! Type AB. If the father is type B, and he happens to donate that antigen, and the mother happens to donate the A antigen in her body, then voila! Type AB. If the father is type AB, and he donates either. The child can be type AB as long as the mother donates the opposite one. It's really all chance. If you are asking whether the mother will reject the blood type in the child, then of course not. They are the same blood type. Perfectly compatible.
The 4 blood types are:A - type A blood has antigen A and antibody anti-BB - type B blood has antigen B and antibody anti-AAB - blood type AB has both antigens A and B and has no antibodiesO - Type O blood has no antigens but has both antibodies anti-A and anti-B
Rh is an antigen. If you have the antigen, your blood type is A+, B+, AB+, or O+. If you don't have the antigen, your blood type is A-, B-, AB-, or O-. People WITH the Rh antigen, can receive from/give to people with Rh+ or Rh-. People WITHOUT the Rh antigen, can ONLY receive from/give to people with Rh- blood. (meaning people without the antigen) If Rh- and Rh+ blood comes in contact, the Rh- will produce antibodies towards Rh+, and at the second contact with the blood, will cause agglutination.