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.
Yes
Anti-body antigen A & B
No. They could have an A- child, but not A+.
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.
Yes. Blood types do not make parents incompatible.
Yes! You could produce a child with either A or B blood.
There are eight types of blood. The blood types can be either A, B, AB, or O. Each one of these blood types can be either negative or positive. So you would have A- or A+, B- or B+ and so on.
To create a B positive blood type, the blood types that can combine are B and either O or B.
The dietary recommendations for someone with a B blood type include the following: low-fat dairy, meat, and produce. Proponents of the diet say that B blood types have a tolerant digestive system but they should avoid corn, wheat, and beans.
The A and B alleles code for enzymes that produce the type A and B antigens respectively. A third version of this gene, the O allele, codes for a protein that is not functional and does not produce surface molecules. Two copies of the gene are inherited, one from each parent. The possible combination of alleles produce blood types in the following way.
there are 8 types of blood a+, b+, o+, ab+,a-,b-,o-,ab-
if both blood types is heterozygous the answer is yes