Yes
Blood types that produce anti-B antibodies include type A and type O. Individuals with type A blood have A antigens and produce anti-B antibodies, while those with type O blood lack A and B antigens and produce both anti-A and anti-B antibodies. Therefore, only blood types A and O can produce the antibodies against type B antigens.
Anti-body antigen A & B
Crossing A genes with B genes can produce offspring with blood types A, B, AB, or O. The A and B genes are codominant, meaning they both express themselves in the AB genotype, while the O gene is recessive to both A and B.
there are 8 types of blood a+, b+, o+, ab+,a-,b-,o-,ab-
All four of the basic blood types can be either be positive or negative, they are A,B,AB, and O. Blood types are used to used define each person blood, they help to make blood transfusions more successful by matching up the blood types.
o+,o-,a+, a-,b-, b+,ab+, ab-
Yes. They can have B+, B-, O+, and O-.
Blood types/groupsA+, A-B+, B-AB+, AB-O+, O-
The types of blood include: A, B, AB, and O. (A-, A+, B-, B+, AB-, AB+, O-, O+)
No, the o parent has to Have O,O alliesand the B parent would only have B,B or B,O allies. The only are B,O and O,O.
It's like comparing apples and oranges. Rh is either + or -. There are A, B, AB and O blood types. So you can get: A + or - B+ or - AB + or - and O + or - blood types.
No, blood types O positive (O+) and B negative (B-) cannot produce a B positive (B+) offspring. Blood type O carries only the O antigen, while blood type B carries the B antigen. To have a B+ blood type, one would need to inherit the B antigen from both parents.