It's impossible because A blood type could be AA or AO and AB is only AB so the children could be AA, AB,AO (which is Atype), or BO (B type) BUT NEVER OO (o type). For the child to be O type they should get one O from one parent and the other O from the other parent. In the case mentioned AB can give A or B NOT and NEVER O. This question is answered by an MD
No, it is not possible for parents with blood types B negative and O positive to have a child with AB positive blood type. The AB blood type requires an A allele from one parent and a B allele from the other, which is not possible in this case.
The child would most likely have either blood type A positive or B positive. A child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so with an AB negative mother and an O positive father, the child could receive the A allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type A positive. Alternatively, the child could receive the B allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type B positive.
Yes, it is possible for an AB positive parent and an O positive parent to have an O positive child. The child would inherit one O allele from the O positive parent and one A or B allele from the AB positive parent, resulting in an O positive blood type.
Yes, it is possible for two parents with blood type B positive to have a child with blood type AB positive. This is because the child can inherit one B allele from each parent to make blood type AB.
You dad can either be O, AB, A,or B and he can be positive or negative.
If a person who is O- were to mate with a person who is AB+, they could not have an O+ child. They could have a child who is A-, A+, B-, or B+, but not O.
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.
No. If both parents are type O, the child will be O. If both are A, the child can be either A or O. If both are B, the child can be either B or O. If both are AB, the child can be A, B, or AB (but not O).
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.
yes
An AB+ and B- couple can't have a child with blood type O. They can have children with blood types A, B, or AB, and can have children with Rh negative or Rh positive blood.
If the mother is A negative, and the father is B positive, they could have children who are A negative, A positive, B negative, B positive, AB negative, AB positive, O negative, or O positive.
No, it is not possible for parents with blood types B negative and O positive to have a child with AB positive blood type. The AB blood type requires an A allele from one parent and a B allele from the other, which is not possible in this case.
No, the father would have to have B or AB.
Yes.
A blood type O child would be impossible from this match. An AB parent must give an A allele or a B allele, and both alleles are dominant. If mother is homozygous B (meaning both alleles are B's), and father is AB, child can be either B or AB. If mother is heteroygous B (meaning one B allele and one O allele), and father is AB, the child can be either A, B, or AB.
The child would most likely have either blood type A positive or B positive. A child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so with an AB negative mother and an O positive father, the child could receive the A allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type A positive. Alternatively, the child could receive the B allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type B positive.