Blood Types Problem Set
Problem 3: What blood type would the father be?
Correct!
If the mother of a child is blood type O+ and the child is A-, what blood type would the father be?
Does the Rh factor of the child being - mean that one of the parents has to be negative? Both of my parents are Rh - all of us siblings are Rh- as well. Could two Rh- parents give birth to a Rh+ child? and versi versa? Thanks for all your help. --MaryEllen
|
The father could be:
|
A.
|
A+, A-, or O-
|
B.
|
A+, A -, AB+, or AB-
Dr. Hallick's reply:
The father could be type A or type AB. The types that can be ruled out for the
father are type O and type B. The father must be the source of the A allele of
the child.
The Rh factor information doesn't discriminate potential fathers of the child. Even though the child is Rh-, it is not necessary that either parent be Rh-. The father of the child could be either Rh+ (heterozygous with one Rh+ allele and one Rh- allele) or Rh- (homozygous with two recessive Rh- alleles).
When the mother is Rh- and the father is Rh+ (heterozygous with one Rh+ allele and one Rh- allele), there is a 50% probability for an Rh+ child and a 50% probability for an Rh- child.
When the mother is Rh- and the father is Rh-, as in the case of your own family, then all children (all of your siblings) will be Rh-.
Once again, if it is important to have correct and highly discriminating information about paternity, my advice would be to explore the possibility of a DNA-based paternity test. Although I cannot personally endorse any particular testing company, you may wish to visit the web page of a paternity lab at http://www.gentestlabs.com/
|
C.
|
B+, B-, or O-
|
The Biology Project
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics
University of Arizona
Thursday, October 23, 1997
Contact the Development Team
http://biology.arizona.edu
All contents copyright © 1997. All rights reserved
.
|