Enantiomers are mirror images of
asymmetrical compounds with one or more chiral centre. Chiral is just a term
used to show that the molecule is asymmetric and thus
non-superimposable and is most commonly caused by a carbon atom. What this
means is that though they are essentially exactly the same chemicals, and
mainly work in the same way, they don’t have the exact same spacial arrangement
and thus need to be recognised.
To visualise this, it may help to
imagine both your hands as optical isomers of one another; with the backs of
your hands facing you, try lining up your fingers and thumbs and you'll see your
thumbs don't match up. Both hands have four fingers and one thumb and are used
just the same but aren't exact copies which is the important difference when
these compounds are used in living systems. Enzymes, as I'm sure we're all
aware, require specifically shaped compounds. While one enantiomer may be
specific, the other will not. Most of the time one enantiomer will be useful
and the other simply won’t bind to the enzyme. Other times, like with for
example Limonene, both will cause different affects such as one enantiomer
having a scent characterised as orange and the other lemon. A more known example
of this difference is seen in the drug Thalidomide which in the late 50s was
prescribed to pregnant women to reduce morning sickness but unfortunately
caused birth defects. One optical isomer causes these malformations whereas the
other is the effective sedative. It’s important now that all drugs with a
chiral centre have all the possible isomers tested separately for separate side
effects and in the interest of saving money and resources, only the useful
enantiomer is likely used.
Polarimeters are thus used to
distinguish between the different optical isomers. Only chiral molecules will
rotate the visible light (after passing plane-polarized light through a
polarimeter) and are said to be optically active. Racemic solutions (50/50 opposite
enantiomer isomer solutions) or solutions without any chiral molecules have no effect
on plane polarized light. Different enantiomers will rotate the light left or
right and are said to be +/-, R/S or D/L.
Resources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalidomide , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enantiomer , http://www2.vuw.ac.nz/staff/paul_teesdale-spittle/organic/chiral_web/context.htm , http://www.chemistryexplained.com/Ce-Co/Chirality.html#b , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality_(chemistry)#The_identity_of_the_stereogenic_atom and http://www.chemguide.co.uk/basicorg/isomerism/optical.html
Author: Grace Ronnie
Resources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalidomide , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enantiomer , http://www2.vuw.ac.nz/staff/paul_teesdale-spittle/organic/chiral_web/context.htm , http://www.chemistryexplained.com/Ce-Co/Chirality.html#b , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality_(chemistry)#The_identity_of_the_stereogenic_atom and http://www.chemguide.co.uk/basicorg/isomerism/optical.html
Author: Grace Ronnie