bb
Your baby could be either blood group A positive or B positive. Since the mother is O positive, she can only pass on an O allele. The father, being AB positive, can pass on either an A or B allele. So, the baby can inherit either blood type A or B from the father, making the baby either blood type A positive or B positive.
To be absolutely certain your full blood type would need to be known as you are B positive your genotype can be either BB or BO as B is dominant to O. If you are group BO your child can be either AB BO AO However if you are BB then you child can be AB BB As to if they will be positive or negative im not sure but im fairly certain that since you and your wife are both rhesus positive then your child will be too.
yes it is true that the child would have either B or O positive blood groups only. This is because the father may have the genotype OB if he is heterozygous and BB if he is homozygous. So is the case for the mother. Rh factor determines if the blood group is positive or negative. Since the parents are positive, so would be the child. Thus upon recombination, the only possible blood groups will be O or B.
If the mother's genotype is BB, the child can be type B or AB (50/50 chance). The child cannot be type A or O. If the mother's genotype is BO, the child can be any type, tho B or AB is more likely. The Rh factor is likely positive but can be negative. So, without knowing the mother's genotype, and the father's specific Rh factor (++ or +-), we cannot be sure.
Yes, it is possible for parents with O positive and B positive blood groups to have a child with either O positive or B positive blood group, as each parent can pass on either their O or B allele to their offspring.
No, blood group B positive indicates the presence of the B antigen on red blood cells, while genotype AA suggests the presence of two A alleles. Blood groups and genotypes are inherited independently, so having a blood group B positive with genotype AA is not possible.
Yes. Having B phenotype can be a result of either BB or B0 genotype.
There are two possibilities.... either group 'O' - or group 'B'. Also, each group can be rhesus positive or negative - making a total of four combinations.
Your baby could be either blood group A positive or B positive. Since the mother is O positive, she can only pass on an O allele. The father, being AB positive, can pass on either an A or B allele. So, the baby can inherit either blood type A or B from the father, making the baby either blood type A positive or B positive.
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.
To be absolutely certain your full blood type would need to be known as you are B positive your genotype can be either BB or BO as B is dominant to O. If you are group BO your child can be either AB BO AO However if you are BB then you child can be AB BB As to if they will be positive or negative im not sure but im fairly certain that since you and your wife are both rhesus positive then your child will be too.
Yes, if your genotype is BO, you can pass on the O allele and the child will be type O. If your genotype is BB, then no, the child will be type B (BO). Positive or negative depends on your specific Rh factor, and that of your husbands.
Yes. If the A rh neg parent has genotype A/A or A/O and rh-/- and the B parent has genotype B/O and rh+/- or +/+ The first parent gives their A to the child and the second partner gives a rh+ (but not their B, and this is why they cannot be B/B) to the child. The child ends up with genotype A/O rh+/-, which would be expressed as blood group A rhesus +.
Yes. If you have BO genotype and your spouse is AB, AO, or AA, then your son can be A positive
yes it is true that the child would have either B or O positive blood groups only. This is because the father may have the genotype OB if he is heterozygous and BB if he is homozygous. So is the case for the mother. Rh factor determines if the blood group is positive or negative. Since the parents are positive, so would be the child. Thus upon recombination, the only possible blood groups will be O or B.
yes. If one parent has blood group A (as in genotype AO) and the other has blood group B (as in genotype BO) can have a child with blood group O
Yes, if one parent had an AO genotype and the other had an OO genotype.