If both parents had heterozygous blood-type genes, then the child could inherit the recessive O type from each parent.
Suppose the mother had the genes for A and O, and the father had the genes for B and O. They would then have blood-types A and B respectively. Depending on which parts were passed to the child, any blood type would be possible.
Because O is recessive and A and B are dominant, both parents could be carrying an O form of the gene without it being apparent. If their baby inherited the O from each of them, the baby would have an O blood type.
Let's say the blood type O is represented as ii. Blood type A either is heterozygous (Ai) or homozygous (AA). The same goes for blood type B (Bi) or (BB). If each parent passes down the heterozygous blood type, the child has a 25% chance of having ii or type O blood.
someone in the family like a grandpa or grandma could have had blood type O
You get your blood type (phenotype) from your parents, each of whom carry their parents blood types (genotype) in their blood. Your ethnicity plays a minor factor because some races tend toward different blood types, but any member of any race can end up with any blood type. Four children of the same parents could all have the different types of blood.
Blood types usually only take blood of the same type, with the exception of O. Different blood types, such as A and B, will see each other as a threat to the body, a foreign object, and will attack each other.
There is four types of blood in humans A B AB and O.But in each of them types there are a possible of at least 20 genetically blood vgroups known today.
of course they can, it doesnt mean that if you dont have the same blood type as your siblings, your adopted or something. if your parent's blood types differ from each other there is a huge tendency that the sibling's blood types are different from each other. for exaple your father is a heterozygous A while your mother is a heterozygous B.. their children's blood types can be AB, and an O can also be one of the possiblities.. if its too complicated to understand then you can just learn it from your genetic lessons in biology..
According to Dr. D'Adamo, there are different diets for each blood. According to each blood type you can achieve the best results following his plan.
Yes, there are 4 different blood types (A, B, O, & AB). Each blood type can either be Rh positive or Rh negative. (e.g., A+, A-, B+, B-, O+, O-, AB+, AB-).
There are two different types of A blood types, there is the one that originated from Europe and one that originated from the Arctic. The two blood types have specific properties and each require certain foods to be healthy.
This book does in fact advocate a special diet for different blood types. This book dictates that each blood type should conform to a specific diet to stay healthy.
Animals have many different kinds. The number of blood types vary throughout each different species. For example, cats have 3, cows have about 800 and dogs have 13 (6-8 of which are the major ones). This is why blood transfusions cannot be made to different species. The donors blood will react to the patients blood because their blood types are not the same.
Yes there are many blood type tables online. All you have to remember is that there are four different blood types with the exception of the RH factors. There is A, B, AB and O each can be positive for the RH or negative.
No, blood is grouped into four types: A, B, AB, and O. Each refering to either the antigen or protein on the surface of red blood cells. With each of those types you can either have a postive or negative Rhesus factor, which is also found on the surface of red blood cells.
Each blood type requires different specific foods. Take note of what type you are and prepare your meals accordingly to the foods your blood type needs.