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Your dad = B, he could be BB or B0

Your mum= AB she has AB

Each of them transferres one allel to you, so you could be:

A+B = AB

B+B = B

A0 = A

B0 = B

So you must be AB, B or A :)

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11y ago
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14y ago

This can be explained by using thePunnett (pew-NET) square. Unfortunately, I'm not good enough to create a pretty one here, so forgive the crudity of my attempt!

Everyone has two alleles (genes) that determine both the blood type (ABO) and Rh type. You inherit one of each from each of your parents. The Punnett square is a way to conceptualize how this works. Start with the ABO type, and draw a tic-tac-toe board:

| |

--------------

| |

--------------

| |

Mom is B (ignore the +/- for now), which means that she can have either of the following combinations of alleles (genes): BB, BO. Dad is A, so he can be either AA or AO. The O type is recessive, and only occurs if the person has O for both alleles. With this info, and the fact that you're B, I'm going to say (and I'll show you why in a second) that your mom can be either of the two types given above, but your dad must be "heterozygous" (has two different alleles, as opposed to "homozygous", where the same allele is expressed twice: BB). So, how did I do that? Here are the squares:

...| B | B <- Mom's blood type (possibility 1)

----------------

A |AB|AB

----------------

O |BO|BO

...| B | O <- Mom's blood type (possibility 2)

----------------

A |AB|AO

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O |BO|OO

What this shows is Mom at the top and Dad down the left. Each square beneath gets filled in with the combination of the row and column represented. The top square shows Mom as homozygous (again, has both "B" alleles). This means any offspring have a 50% chance of being B blood type (the two BO squares) and 50% chance being AB type. The bottom square is the heterozygous pattern for Mom. Now there's a 25% chance than any offspring will have one of the available blood types (A, B, AB and O). That's the easy part.

The Rh factor (the "positive" or "negative" aspect of your blood type) is similar, but instead of A's, B's and O's, we need to consider Dominant versus Recessive. the Rhesus factor (what Rh is an abbreviation of) is dominant, so if one of the two alleles has it, then the person is said to be positive. If both alleles have it, then again, the person is positive. The only way for one to be negative is if both alleles are the recessive type. Let's do another Punnett square, this time "R" means dominant allele and "r" means recessive (R for Rhesus). Since you're negative and both parents are positive, I'm going to jump ahead and tell you that each of your parents is heterozygous dominant (Rr). I'll also show a square where one of your parents is homozygous dominant (RR) to prove it.

...| R |r

----------------

R |RR|Rr

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r |Rr|rr

Since the Rh factor is dominant (anywhere you see a "R" means that kid is positive), there's a 75% chance (3/4 squares) that offspring will be positive, and a 25% chance that they will be negative. This is the only combination of positive parents that can produce a negative child. Here's the proof:

...| R |R

----------------

R |RR|Rr

----------------

r |Rr|rR

By making Mom (or Dad!) homozygous dominant, we've changed the table and the probabilities- now it's IMPOSSIBLE for these two parents to have an Rh negative child, since every inner square (the offspring) has at least one capital R.

Just remember that these are probabilities, so if you happen to have 3 siblings, you're not guaranteed to see every possible combination! Each time your parents have a child, each child has the same probability of inheriting the above parameters, so if you were worried that your dad may not be your father, don't! It's perfectly explainable! :)

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13y ago

If the mother is homozygous (BB, AA): the child is AB.

If the mother is heterozygous (Bi, AA): the child is A or AB.

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7y ago

If both parents are AB, then the offspring can be AB or A or B.

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Q: Mother is B blood type and Father is AA blood type?
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Related questions

What blood type is the father if the mother is AB and the baby is AB?

The father would be either AB or AA.


What blood type a baby will be if father is a and mother is o?

The genotype of the father is certainly OO (because blood type O is recessive). The genotype of the mother however can be AO or AA (both give blood type A). The baby will have a combination of the genes from the mother and the father (one of each) and so: - If the genotype of the mother is AA and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby will certainly have AO as genotype and has therefore blood type A. -If the genotype of the mother is AO and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby can have AO or OO as genotype. AO results in blood type A and OO in blood type O (50% chance).


What blood type a baby will be if father is o and mother is a?

The genotype of the father is certainly OO (because blood type O is recessive). The genotype of the mother however can be AO or AA (both give blood type A). The baby will have a combination of the genes from the mother and the father (one of each) and so: - If the genotype of the mother is AA and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby will certainly have AO as genotype and has therefore blood type A. -If the genotype of the mother is AO and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby can have AO or OO as genotype. AO results in blood type A and OO in blood type O (50% chance).


If father has blood type B positive and mother has blood type A negative what may be the blood type of the child?

The child may be any blood type, depending on the genotype of the parents. If, for example, the father's genotype is BB and the mother's is AA, then the baby must be type AB. If the father's is BO and the mother's is AO, then the baby can be any type.


What would baby's blood type be if the father is type A plus and mother is type O?

The baby's blood type would either be type A or type O. The father (phenotype A) could have an underlying genotype of either AA or AO. Therefore, the baby could have either type A (AO - with A from the father and O from the mother) or type O (OO - with O from the father and O from the mother) blood.


If your father has type A blood can you have type O blood?

Yes, that is entirely possible. Your father could be AA or AO, meaning your possible blood types (depending on your mother's) are: A, B, AB, and O.


Can a baby be born with blood type o if the father is blood type o and the mother blood type a?

Yes. The father's blood type must be oo. The mother's blood type could either be Ao or AA (both of these are blood type A). If the mothers blood type is Ao, she could give the o gene to the baby, resulting in the baby being type oo (or type o). (In order to have blood type o, you must have an o from your mother and an o from your father.)


Does a child have their mother's or father's blood?

NO. You have to remember that each parent contributes one gene.For instance, look at these examples:Mama type A (AA or AO) + Papa type A (AA or AO) = Baby type A or type OMama type A (AA or AO) + Papa type B (BB or BO) = Baby type A, AB or OMama type A (AA or AO) + Papa type AB = Baby type A, B or ABMama type A (AA or AO) + Papa type OO = Baby type A or O


How does a A blood type mother AND a father have a -0 blood type child?

The mother and father both have heterozygous alleles for the blood group A. The blood group A can have the alleles AA or AO, when both parents are AO, there is a one in four chance that the child will have blood group O as this blood group is recessive.


Could a child with type B blood have parents that both have type A blood?

No, it's not possible. Someone with type A blood has the genotype AA or AO, so if both parents are type A their children could only be type A or type O. eg if the mother was genotype AA and father also AA, their children could only be AA (i.e. homozygous for blood type A), but if the mother were AO and the father AO (i.e. heterozygous), then their children could be AA, AO, or OO (i.e. blood type O). If the mother was AO but the father AA, then their children could be AO or AA but not OO. This is due to the way genetic information is passed from parent to child; male gametes (sperm) contain 23 paternal chromosomes and female gametes (egg) contain 23 maternal chromosomes, so when they fuse at conception to form the foetus (46 chromosomes as everyone has, except those with certain genetic disorders), it has 50% genetic information from the father, and 50% from the mother.


Can a blood type O father give blood type A to his offspring?

It depends on the mother's genotype. O blood is recessive, so the father has OO blood. Both A and B are dominant, so an AA or AO genotype would result in a type A blood phenotype. Since the father is homozygous recessive, he must donate an O. Therefore, for the child to be type A, the mother must donate an A to create an AO genotype for the child. So, if the mother has type A blood or type AB blood, the child could have type A blood.


If the mother has a blood type and the father has b what will the child have?

Depending on the parents' genotypes, children will be:AB if the mother has BB genotype and father has AA genotype.AB & A if the mother has BO genotype and father has AA genotype.AB & B if the mother has BB genotype and father has AO genotype.AB, A, B & O if the mother has BO genotype and father has AO genotype.