No. The B antigen is different from the A antigen, and type O blood has neither A nor B antigens. To get a child with type A blood, one of the parents has to donate the A antigen gene, which means one of the parents must be either A or AB.
No they cannot. They can only have a child with type A or type O blood.
No, parents who are both blood type A cannot produce a child with blood type AB because blood type AB is the result of inheriting one A allele and one B allele. Both parents would need to pass on the B allele to the child in order for them to have blood type AB.
No. It is not possible for a child to have A if the parents are O blood type. If both parents have type O blood, then their children will also have type O blood. However, two parents with type A or type B blood (both the same or one of each) can sometimes have a child with type O blood. That is because the gene for type O blood is recessive. But they must carry the O type. However, two parents with type AB blood can have a child with type A, type B, or type AB blood, but cannot have a child with type O blood.
Blood type can be determined from parents by looking at their blood types and using the principles of genetics. A child's blood type is determined by the combination of blood type genes inherited from their parents. For example, if both parents have type A blood, their child could have either type A or type O blood. If one parent has type A blood and the other has type B blood, their child could have type A, type B, type AB, or type O blood.
If both parents are type O, they will always produce type O offspring.
It is not possible for two parents with blood type O negative to have a child with blood type AB. In the ABO blood group system, type O is recessive and AB is a combination of A and B, making it impossible for two parents with type O blood to produce a child with type AB blood.
Parents must be blood type A or O. Any other blood type will not result in a sole A type child. It might result in several other combinations though, which are not relevant to this question.
The gentotype is ii that will produce blood type O. The allele i is recessive, so both parents must have at least one i allele, and the child must be ii (double recessive) to be blood type O. The parents' blood types do not have to be type O- the genotypes Ai (blood type A, as A is dominant), and Bi (blood type B) can produce blood type O offspring, as long as the child inherits the i allele.
No - this is not possible. The child must have one parent with an A allele in order to have type A blood. Neither of these parents have an A allele - so this is not possible.
No. Generally when both parents are Type O+ they produce Type O+ or O- children. See also: http://www.bloodbook.com/inherited.html
The baby will be type O negative. It cannot be any other blood type.
No they cannot. They can only have a child with type A or type O blood.
The baby's blood group depends on the genotypes of both parents, not just one.
If both parents have type A blood then the baby should have type A blood. or type O blood
Can a-mother and o+ father have ab+ baby
Yes, two B positives can produce an O positive child.
Yes, parents with O and A blood types can have a child with A- blood type. The child would inherit one A allele from the parent with A blood type and one negative Rh factor from the parent with O blood type.