Stereochemistry, a subdiscipline of
chemistry, involves the study of the relative
spatial arrangement of
atoms within
molecules. An important branch of stereochemistry
is the study of
chiral
molecules.
Stereochemistry is a hugely important facet of chemistry and the
study of stereochemical problems spans the entire range of
organic,
inorganic,
biological,
physical and
supramolecular chemistries.
Stereochemistry includes methods for determining and describing
these relationships; the effect on the
physical or
biological
properties these relationships impart upon the molecules in
question, and the manner in which these relationships influence the
reactivity of the molecules in question (
dynamic stereochemistry).
Louis Pasteur could rightly be
described as the first stereochemist, having observed in 1849 that
salts of
tartaric
acid collected from
wine production vessels
could rotate plane
polarized light,
but that salts from other sources did not. This property, the only
physical property in which the two types of tartrate salts
differed, is due to
optical
isomerism. In 1874,
Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff
and
Joseph Le Bel explained optical
activity in terms of the tetrahedral arrangement of the atoms bound
to carbon.
One of the most infamous demonstrations of the significance of
stereochemistry was the
thalidomide
disaster.
Thalidomide is a drug, first prepared in 1957 in Germany
, prescribed
for treating morning sickness in pregnant
women. The drug however was discovered to cause deformation
in
babies. It was discovered that one optical
isomer of the drug was safe while the other had
teratogenic effects, causing serious
genetic damage to early
embryonic growth and development. In the human body,
thalidomide undergoes
racemization:
even if only one of the two stereoisomers is ingested, the other
one is produced. Thalidomide is currently used as a treatment for
leprosy and must be used with contraceptives
in women to prevent pregnancy-related deformations.This disaster
was a driving force behind requiring strict testing of drugs before
making them available to the public.
Cahn-Ingold-Prelog
priority rules are part of a system for describing a molecule's
stereochemistry. They rank the atoms around a stereocenter in a
standard way, allowing the relative position of these atoms in the
molecule to be described unambiguously. A
Fischer projection is a simplified way to
depict the stereochemistry around a stereocenter.
Types of
stereoisomerism are:
References