Yes, if both parents have blood type O, they can only pass on an O allele to their offspring. Therefore, the child must have blood type O.
The possible blood type outcomes of their offspring would be type B or AB. Each parent passes on one blood type allele to their child, so the child could inherit the B allele from the mother and the B or A allele from the father, resulting in blood type B or AB.
Yes, it is possible for a father with blood type A and a mother with blood type B to have a baby who is male or female with blood type AB if the baby inherits one A allele from the father and one B allele from the mother. In the ABO blood group system, the A and B alleles are codominant, meaning both can be expressed in the offspring.
All of their children would have type O blood, as the mother can only pass on an O blood type allele and the father can only pass on A or B blood type alleles. Since the mother is OO and the father is either AA or AB, their children would inherit one O allele from the mother and one A or B allele from the father, resulting in type O blood for all offspring.
A woman with type AB blood has both alleles that give blood both the A antigens and the B antigens, but the man with type O blood has both of the alleles that lack these antigens. Because the child will receive one allele from the mother and one from the father, none of their children will have AB or O blood.
O
Possible blood types are A, B, or AB. Basically, the offspring can be any blood type except for O.
A, B, AB, O ---> all of them
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
If the father is homozygous for the B blood group, giving him the BB blood genotype, and the mother's genotype is AB (the only genotype for the AB blood group), then their offspring could have either the AB or B blood groups. If the father is heterozygous for the B blood group, giving him the BO genotype, then their offspring could have the AB, A, or B blood groups. However, they could not produce an offspring with the O blood group.
Yes, an individual with blood type B can produce an offspring with blood type A. The explanation for this is that a mother with the blood type A can have a child with a father who has a blood type of A or AB and produce a child with type A blood.
It depends on if one or both parents carry type O. If they do not, then the only type will be AB. If they do carry O, then the offspring can be AO, AB, BO or OO.