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dna replication or repair occurs in a cell in all of the following situations, except when

DNA replication or repair occurs in a cell in almost every major context where DNA must be copied or maintained, except when a cell has permanently exited the cell cycle and is in a fully differentiated, non‑dividing (quiescent) state such as G0. Below is a focused, exam-style explanation tailored to the phrasing “DNA replication or repair occurs in a cell in all of the following situations, except when…”.

Core idea

  • DNA replication happens only during the S phase of the cell cycle, just before a cell divides.
  • DNA repair operates essentially all the time in both dividing and non‑dividing cells, because DNA damage can occur continuously from metabolism, radiation, and chemicals.

So, the typical “EXCEPT when…” answer is a situation where:

  1. The cell is not preparing to divide (no S phase → no replication), and
  2. The question is implicitly focusing on replication more than repair, or is describing a state where active maintenance is minimal (e.g., fully terminally differentiated cell with no further division).

In most multiple‑choice question banks, the “EXCEPT” option is usually:

A cell that has left the cell cycle and is in G0 (terminally differentiated, not preparing for division).

How this lines up with common options

Typical options you might see (wording varies):

  1. During mitosis or meiosis in preparation for cell division
  2. During normal growth and progression through interphase
  3. After DNA damage from radiation or chemicals
  4. In a cell that has permanently exited the cell cycle (G0)
  • Options 1 and 2: DNA replication occurs in S phase of interphase before both mitosis and meiosis, so these do involve replication.
  • Option 3: DNA repair mechanisms are activated after damage in both dividing and non‑dividing cells, so this does involve repair.
  • Option 4: A truly terminally differentiated G0 cell will not re‑enter S phase, so full genomic replication does not occur there; only basal repair may continue.

Thus, the “EXCEPT when” situation is:

When a cell is in a terminally differentiated, non‑dividing G0 state and is not preparing for further division.

Mini takeaway

If your exam question is:

“DNA replication or repair occurs in a cell in all of the following situations, EXCEPT when…”

The best answer pattern is:

  • EXCEPT when the cell has permanently exited the cell cycle (G0 / terminally differentiated), so it no longer undergoes DNA replication.

Meta description (SEO):
Learn the correct conceptual answer to “DNA replication or repair occurs in a cell in all of the following situations, except when,” including how DNA replication is restricted to S phase and why terminally differentiated G0 cells are the classic “EXCEPT” case in exam questions.