Assuming a and b are referring to blood types...
The father will have the genotype Ao
The mother will have the genotype Bo
Their offspring will be 1AB:1Bo:1Ao:1oo. This means the child has an equal chance (1/4) of being blood type A, B, AB and O.
Yes, as long as the father is heterozygous for B (Bi, not BB) and the mother has an A allele (she might be type AB or A).
all type A children born in this condition are A heterozygous . there is two possibilities with the father genes but both give us the same result, since we don't know the father blood type is hetero or homo : if Father is Hetero : 1- Father(IAi --> A) and Mother(ii --> O), the Children are 50% of the kids will be O 50% of the kids will be A ( hetero) if Father is Homo : 2- Father(IAIA --> A) and Mother(ii --> O), the Children are 100% of the kids will be A ( hetero) so in both cases weither the father is homo or hetero, children will be hetero, because of the mother blood type.
If the father is homozygous (ii, BB): the baby will be type B. If the father is heterozygous (ii, Bi): the baby will be type B or O.
Yes, it is possible for a heterozygous mother with blood type A to have an O blood child when the father has blood type AB. This occurs because the mother provides an O allele and the father provides a recessive O allele, resulting in the child having blood type O.
Yes it is possible. Blood type O is recessive. So it is true that the child would need an OO blood type. But if the mother is OO and the father is BO..... Then in this case the mother would contribute an "O" and the father a B or an O. If the father contributes an O then the child will be type O. Of course in order for this to happen the father must be heterozygous and not homozygous for the dominant blood type.
An A blood group father can have an O type child. If he does, then he is heterozygous for type A.
Its a possibility. Although the parents have to both be heterozygous with the type O blood. Because type O blood is recessive while type A and type B are dominant.
The mother and father both have heterozygous alleles for the blood group A. The blood group A can have the alleles AA or AO, when both parents are AO, there is a one in four chance that the child will have blood group O as this blood group is recessive.
Yes, it is possible for a child to have a different blood type than their father. A child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so if the child receives a B allele from their mother and an A allele from their father, they can have blood type B.
Yes, it can happen. for Rh- to come, both parents should be Heterozygous. Medical Answers need to be confirmed and re-confirmed.
A man with any blood type by AB can father a child with type O blood. A parent heterozygous for type A or B may have a child with type O.
Yes A is dominant over O so if a child inherited the A gene from the father the child would be A Plus (or Rh +) is dominant over Negative (or Rh -). So if mother and father are both heterozygous for the Rh gene then 1 in 4 children will be Negative