There is only one possible blood genotype that gives group O. The person must be homozygous for type O.
Yes, it is possible for a mother with blood group O and a father with blood group AB to have a child with blood group O. This would occur if the child inherited the O allele from the mother and the O allele from the father.
No. The daughter will be either blood group A (with genotype AO) or blood group B (genotype BO). This is because she must inherit one of the alleles from her father, so either an A or a B.
If the parents both have the genotype Aa, their children could have the genotypes AA, Aa, or aa. The possible phenotypes for their children would be individuals with type A blood (AA or Aa genotype) or type O blood (aa genotype).
The woman would have genotype AO (IAIA) for blood type A, the man would have genotype BO (IBIB) for blood type B, and their child with blood type O would have genotype OO (ii). The child inherited one O allele from each parent.
Yes, a person with AO genotype can donate blood to a person with blood type O because type O can receive blood from A and O blood types. The A from the donor's blood will not cause a reaction with the recipient's O blood.
When the parents are with blood group AB and O, the possible blood group of the child would be either A or B. This is because the blood group AB has the genotype AB and blood group O has the genotype OO. Thus upon recombination, the only outcomes would be AO - meaning blood group A, or BO- meaning blood group B.
Yes, it is possible for a mother with blood group O and a father with blood group AB to have a child with blood group O. This would occur if the child inherited the O allele from the mother and the O allele from the father.
No. The daughter will be either blood group A (with genotype AO) or blood group B (genotype BO). This is because she must inherit one of the alleles from her father, so either an A or a B.
If both parents are genotype BB, the child can only be blood type B. The child's genotype would also be BB.
No, it is not possible for the baby to have an A group with both parents being O. This is because the parents would have the genotype OO,thus on recombination, the only possible outcome is again an O.
If the parents both have the genotype Aa, their children could have the genotypes AA, Aa, or aa. The possible phenotypes for their children would be individuals with type A blood (AA or Aa genotype) or type O blood (aa genotype).
The mother would have to be type A. Father has genotype (0,0) Mother would need to have genotype (A,0) - fenotype (blood group) = A
The woman would have genotype AO (IAIA) for blood type A, the man would have genotype BO (IBIB) for blood type B, and their child with blood type O would have genotype OO (ii). The child inherited one O allele from each parent.
Yes, a person with AO genotype can donate blood to a person with blood type O because type O can receive blood from A and O blood types. The A from the donor's blood will not cause a reaction with the recipient's O blood.
Because the actuality of IAIA is actually A then the father would be type A and the mother being type O they would produce children of Type A blood type. For the answer I chose A) A... I just had this on my Bio exam.
This is a homogenous state of the gene coding for antigen A (consequently blood group A) on the plasma membrane of the erythrocytes.There are three genes that have been isolated as being responsible for blood groups i.e A,B,O.A and B codes for the presence of the respective antigen on the R.B.C while O codes for the absence of both antigen A&B.Gene A and B are co-dominant and thus an individual with genotype AB has blood group AB because both genes express themselves phenotypically.Genotype AO will still be phenotypically expressed as blood group A just like AA.
A person with blood group O is homozygous for the recessive allele: ii.