[MUSIC] So the first meetings between Renault and Jacob, who were to become very, very close friends, was when Jacob asked Monod if they could work in the lab. And Monod said, no, no, you don't ask me, you ask Monsieur Loeff. Very formal, but then he starts to interact with Wollman, Loeff, and Monod. And what he writes about Monod is this very multiple kinds of characters that Monod had. Fantastic intellectual mechanics, interest for approximately everything, very cultured. Absolutely rigor in criticism that was feared by all the members, all the people who had to come under Monod's criticism. An incredible personal charm, a desire to dominate intellectually, even to terrorize his surroundings, and then in a nutshell, a fire personality, which I think is a very good way of saying it. And so they start having meetings and since Jacob is junior, he's doctorate but he's junior to Monod and to Loeff, he says monsieur because that's a way you address to a superior. In the States you would say, in English you would say sir, in France, you say monsieur. In Germany, you would say herr professor or herr doctor, but in France, you don't say monsieur professor, you say monsieur. So it says monsieur. And then after a little while, Monod gets a little bit annoyed and says. [FOREIGN] I'm not a medical professor, big shot in the medical school. So, Jacob was still a bit shy so he decided not to call him anything. That goes on for another two, three weeks, and then one day, Monod explodes and said, [FOREIGN]. And Jacob asks, [FOREIGN]. And this was very typical, one was extremely well behaved and very, extremely polite, and the other one was quite abrasive, extremely bright, capable of being both totally charming and impossible. So these two personalities is very different, would actually be a fantastic team, because they will together, essentially, invent what we, or create the mental frame in which we think about gene expression even today. They got a third person. The third person was a guy named Pardee. Pardee was a student of Dennis Powling. And he was a sitting professor and he went on sabbatical to work as a pastor. Pardee was interested in the way enzyme can be modulated by different molecules. And he did some of the most beautiful work on what would become allostery. But the person who gets the credit for the allostery model is Monod. Because Monod and Shenzer wrote a very, very clear description of the phenomenon which is still used, because you still talk about allosteric enzymes. So the first paper is this one. So this paper is published in 1959. Jacob is at the Pasteur since the end of war, since 1948. Monod since the end of the war, and Pardee just joined for his sabbatical. The title of the paper is very precise, genetic control, expression of inducibility in the cytoplasm using beta-galactosidase of E Coli. Now, why did these people use the lactose system? Well, you may think because they like milk. Nope. They used the lactose system because one of the question that was one of the controversies that was raging at the time when people were discussing adaptation is that is there a protein that is important for inducing, for adaptation? And is this protein the same, or is it different than the enzyme that he used to metabolize lactose? That was the key question. And Monod decided that this question could only be approached easily by finding chemicals that could either induce an obvious substrate or be a substrate and not induce. Or do nothing or do both, chemicals that would allow you to split the phenomenon. And so he went to the drawers of the Pasteur, and he found a collection of chemicals that had been abandoned in 1940 by a very famous biochemist, Otto Meyerhof, who had been the director of the Heidelberg University or Heidelberg Institutory. Geiselberg Institute and who had essentially with Embden and Parnas discovered glycolysis, or characterized glycolysis. So Fischer had to abandon this connection because he had to flee when the Germans were entering Paris. Why? Not Fischer, sorry, Meyerhof had to flee. Meyerhof was Jewish. Meyerhof had been a student of Fischer. Emil Fischer, the chemist who invented the image of the enzyme and the substrate, are like the key and the lock. And in the collection of chemicals, there were sugars that had been synthesized, and this is really an irony of a small world. The sugars had been synthesized by a guy named Conrad Delbruck, who was the uncle of the Max Delbruck of the Luria-Delbruck experiment, very small world. And among these chemicals, there were derivatives that had a sulfur atom in the sugar and he used this. And since he only had analogs of lactose, he decided to concentrate on lactose. So that's why the lactose. Okay, so the paper is published in the Journal of Molecular Biology, in the first volume of this journal in 1959. In fact the paper amplifies and completes a first short paper, a very short paper published in the [FOREIGN] that has one figure, which is included in this paper. Today, you will not be allowed to take one figure from a paper and put it in another paper. It would be considered self-plagiarism. At the time, people were a bit more relaxed. The first note in the [FOREIGN] was published in May 58. So, it took about a year to write the manuscript and to complete the experiment. So what will they do in this paper? Well, first of all, they will look at different mutants. They have three kinds of mutants that they can look. The one that they call z-, they don't make the enzyme galactosidase. The one that are called y-, they don't accumulate lactose inside the cell. It's a transporter. And they have another third class of mutants that are called i-. What's the difference between the i- and the i+? The i+ means i for inducible. You add lactose, you find beta-galactosidase in the cell. You don't add lactose, you have very little beta-galactosidase in the cell, inducible. The i- is constitutive, beta-galactosidase is made all the time, whether you have lactose around or no lactose around. They have lost the control, so those are the mutants they have. And then they have what we discussed last week, they will do crosses between HFr strains and F- strains. You see, Volman was not interested in this aspect because he was interested in the math. Monod was interested in inducibility or adaptation or control of gene expression. And Jacob had experience with the HFr F- crosses. So that's how they got together. And Pardee was a good biochemist, he could assay the enzymes very easily. So that's what they have.