[MUSIC] At the time the major thinking frame that people had was what was called instructive theory. Instructive theory means that proteins are floating around, and when the substrate of the enzyme is there, the protein will fold around the substrate and do its job, and maybe stay folded, but that was instructive theory. This theory was also used to explain antibody specificity, or antigen. The antibody, the native antibody have no specificity, and when they encounter an antigen, they will fold around the antigen and take a shape and this shape will be preserved. We know that these theories are completely wrong, but they were the dominant theories of the time. Now Monroe was extremely keen on terminology. He insisted on using the right words to describe what you see and using words that had no double meaning or no confusion in them. So this phenomenon he called Diauxie. It's a double glu, two glu. So then he set up to establish whether you can distinguish mutation from adaptation. And for this, he used a strain that was given to him by. I have to put this in an understandable context. e.coli was isolated by. And among the things that did, he found the shape, the. He found that it was a gram negative, and it was fermenting a number of sugars including lactose. So the original e.coli The ooh e coli, if you want to call it, was a Lac+ cell. So the original e.coli was Lac+. Now very early on, people isolated e coli from babies that were like minus. They were otherwise identical to the e.coli, but they were like minus, not capable of fermenting lactose. So these were called the lac deficient, or Lac- in today's terminology. A very careful investigator named Messini observed was that if you have colony of these Lac- cells that grow on lactose. So this is let's say 10 to the 6 cells, and you have a low amount of lactose in the plate, so, they commonly don't grow very high, to the very high density. What he observed with this, was that in these colonies, if he let them sit long enough, he would get, so, I would draw a colony without the number, here, and what he would get would be a papillae. A little red, because that's the color of the indicator, or he would get a growth. It would be growing faster because it would utilize lactose as a common source and it would limit glucose on the plate. So this was a chain. So this lactose train was called Lac or Mutabile? Mutabile because it is capable of changing. Of course at the time people had very fake ideas about mutation. So this strain is very easy to get. It's very easy to get LAC- e.coli. Had isolated for reasons that are unknown today. A strain from his only testicle tract, that was like Mayans. And this strain, was called by the lab, ML3. So, for the American post docs, who were, came through the pastor, they thought that ML3 was called ML3, because it was. The way you address to him, it was a polite way of naming the strain. Some less respectful, those dogs, would say, or visitors, would say no, no, no, this is [FOREIGN] because it comes from all the way about shit. So, and this name was running around in books. So one day I asked [FOREIGN] about whether he had an explanation on it and men he said, this is completely ridiculous. All the strains [FOREIGN] lab were taken care off by [FOREIGN] wife who's name was Margaret. So the strains were named ML for [FOREIGN] because strains are usually given a name that resembles one way or another the people who studied or characterized the strain. So [FOREIGN] was a scientist helping her husband. We didn't get much recognition. It was certainly a very careful bacteriologist. She kept the strain, she kept ML3. ML3 was used by [FOREIGN] and one of his students, [FOREIGN]. They could, with this strain, separate the phenomenon of adaptation making an enzyme capable of using lactose and mutation from Lac- to Lac+. So they separated the two phenomenon, and the y type strain in the lab was a strain called ML30, which was a Lac+ derivative of ML3. So it's not the y type, it's a reverting of a mutant. But this is a y type strain, this is the original script if you want. So that's the story with the beginning and then during this time having done this he was able to meet to go to the states in 46. And go to a meeting, I called Spring Harbor where he met Del Brooke and Lurian who were studying mutation who had actually proposed a bacteria to have mutations and used the quantity of test to demonstrate the mutation theory, and so all of a sudden everything was clear.