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  #1  
Old 06-28-2007, 02:31 AM
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Red face The Bombay Blood Group

The Bombay blood group is a rare group except in parts of India where a frequency of 1 in 7,600 has been observed. A high level of consanguinity has been observed among the parents of the Bombay phenotype(8). Individuals with the Bombay phenotype fail to express ANY A, B, or H antigen on their red cells or other tissues (8,39).

The cause of this antigenic absence is that the individuals produce no H glycosyl transferase ( FUT1). There is no H enzyme activity detected on the individuals red cells or in their serum.

These individuals may, however, posses either the A and / or the B gene on chromosome 9 and while an A or B glycosyl transferase may be produced there is no H antigen precursor that can be converted into either the A or B antigen (8, 39).

The cause of the Bombay phenotype is , predominately, mutation in the H gene on chromosome 19 that causes a non functional H glycosyl transferase to be produced. This is generally a Mendelian recessive gene. One cause identified has been a mutation that changes the code for trypsin at amino acid residue 316 of the transferase to that for a stop codon. The result is a truncated, non functional H transferase (8).

The serological characteristics are;

Quote:
No agglutination with anti-A, anti-B or anti-H typing sera.

Posses anti-A, anti-B and anti-H in their serum.

No H glycosyl transferase activity detected on the red cell membrane or in serum (8).
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Old 06-28-2007, 02:15 PM
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Bombay blood group(immunology) A system comprising an immunologically distinct, genetically determined group of human erythrocytes characterized by the lack of A, B, or H antigens.

I found an easy definition!
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Old 06-28-2007, 09:31 PM
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then can it be called o negative
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Old 06-29-2007, 03:30 AM
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Originally Posted by carjaya View Post
then can it be called o negative
nope..
i thought someone will ask this question surely..
o negetive has also h antigen so no anti-h while bombay bloodgroup person have anti-h.
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Old 07-01-2007, 11:48 AM
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can u explain it clearly .. o negative is so called because it has no A B ond H antigens on its surface.. please correct me if i am wrong
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Old 07-02-2007, 12:10 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by carjaya View Post
can u explain it clearly .. o negative is so called because it has no A B ond H antigens on its surface.. please correct me if i am wrong
ABO blood groups do not consider the presence or absence of the H antigen.So by definition a person is defined as the O blood group if he has no A or B antigens on their surface.

Whie a person with the Bombay phenotype does not have the H antigen therefore will express the anti-H antibody.So on an ABO scaling these people will show up as O negative but will show a transfusion reaction when receiving O negative blood.They can only receive Bombay phenotype blood.

This is how i have understood it
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Old 07-02-2007, 04:39 PM
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it's not like that.

everyone with ABO bloodgroup has h antigen of RBC surface.
so they have not anti-h antibody.

while bombay group's[rare] individual have no h antigen also and antih,anti-a and anti-b antibody present.
hope basic idea of it you will get from my explanation.
it is hot favourite viva question in pathology.
check out here for details.
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Old 07-02-2007, 10:29 PM
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What you are saying is true but my prof told me what i have written above.
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Old 07-02-2007, 10:37 PM
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Lolz.
it's k.
My proffesor told me right.
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Old 07-03-2007, 05:05 PM
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thanks. my doubt is cleared..
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