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2007-04-15 07:22:07 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Biology

Hi thanks for all the answers, just a quick add on the rhesus factors are father a+ mother b- and kid id o+, hope this makes it easier, thanks

2007-04-15 22:11:59 · update #1

10 answers

Yes. In this case the child could be either A, B, AB, or O.

2007-04-15 07:31:14 · answer #1 · answered by arkiemom 6 · 0 0

Yes.

Probability depends on the parents genotype. One gene, 3 allelomorphs. Can only occur if both parents O heterozygotes.

A/A x B/B = only A/B

A/A x B/O = 50% A/B 50% A/O

A/O x B/B = 50% A/B 50% B/O

A/O x B/O = 25% A/B 25% A/O 25% B/O 25% O/O

A, B are dominant to O, co-dominant to each other.

2007-04-15 07:47:46 · answer #2 · answered by Norwich 2 · 1 1

Yes, it could. If the parents' genes are AO and BO, their blood types would be A and B (because the O gene is recessive and doesn't show), but they could each pass an O gene to the child. The child's genes would then be OO, making its blood type O.

2007-04-15 07:38:38 · answer #3 · answered by Amy F 5 · 0 0

Their child can be O with a 1/4 chance.

2007-04-15 07:25:06 · answer #4 · answered by SweetNurse 4 · 0 2

Yes, with 25% chances.

2007-04-15 13:00:57 · answer #5 · answered by felipelotas1 3 · 0 0

Yes, their child could be Type O.

Parental genotypes: AO, BO (or IAi and IBi).

2007-04-15 07:26:34 · answer #6 · answered by ecolink 7 · 2 0

yes if the perents are a,o and b,o there kid could be o,o and so av blood type o

xx

2007-04-15 10:30:42 · answer #7 · answered by pixiexxpixiexpixie 2 · 0 0

search the father

2007-04-15 10:06:44 · answer #8 · answered by rinogc 3 · 0 0

Well... Yeah.
I'm bloodtype B and my mom's P- and dads A

2007-04-15 07:30:13 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Don't think so (try a paternity test) to be 100%

2007-04-15 07:27:08 · answer #10 · answered by toots 2 · 0 2

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