Home & Garden1 min ago
rhesus
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Maloney. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If , as I think , the rhesus negative gene is recessive then to be rhesus neg you need two neg genes.
If you have 1 rh pos and 1 rh neg you will be rh pos. However you can pass on the rh neg gene.
If both parents carry 1 rh neg gene then statistically 1 in four of their offspring will be rh neg.
HOWEVER if my original sentance is wrong then the rest of the explanation is also c**p.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C0115080/?c=groups&v=p rintable
Just found this link - check it out.
The answer is yes.
The site does not disprove sillymoo's answer. All it says is that the rhesus Negative gene is recessive (i.e. non dominant) and the Rhesus positive gene is dominant.
Thus even though a parent may be Rhesus Positive, they may also carry the recessive negative gene.
If two Rh Positive parents both carry recessive negative genes, then as sillymoo states, one out of 4 children has the chance of being RH negative, the other three will be Positive, but two of them will carry the recessive negative gene.
However, if both parents have only RH positive genes - with two Rhesus Positive genes then there is no way the baby can be RH negative as the Rh Positive gene always takes precedence.
The basic rule of thumb in genetics is that some genes are dominant, and some are recessive. The recessive genes give way to the dominant ones, but can be passed on to offspring. If an offspring ends up with two recessive genes (rather than one dominant and one recessive) then they take on that characteristic controlled by the recessive gene. Otherwise the dominant one wins.
Hi Net, Your father could have been positive but had one positive and one negative gene. This would have given him a positive rhesus value himself, but enabled him to pass on the rhesus negative factor to his children.
If you are Rh negative, the fact that your daughter is positive should explain it to you. She got one negative gene from you and the positive one from her father. So, perhaps like your own father she is positive herself but carries the negative gene.
Yes Net. The men could have been any blood group. You get one gene from your mum and one from your dad and if the genes are not the same then the positive one takes precedence.
For all of the children to end up as negative, each of the fathers must have carried a negative gene, whether or not their own blood group was Rh positive.