wasteofo2 said:
I'm not the most well-versed guy in bio-chem, so that paragraph kinda went over my head. How are trans and cis fats different than natural fats, and what are natural fats called (is it just "fats"?)? Also, what is an olefin form? What does the word racimically mean?
Thanks alot,
Jacob
well, rotation is not possible around a carbon double bond. so atoms that are bound to those carbons are locked into place, so to speak. take C_2H_2Cl_2, for example, with a double bond between the carbons. there are three possible forms (aka isomers) of that molecule:
1) one with both Cl's bound to the same carbon
2) one where each Cl is bound to a carbon, on the same side of the double side
3) one where each Cl is bound to a carbon, across from each other
2 is called the "cis" form, and 3 is called the "trans" form. it is hard to explain without pictures, so maybe you can look them up on google if that doesn't make sense. cis fats are the natural ones.
olefin is another name for an alkene (aka a double-bonded hydrocarbon).
racemic refers to the fact that typically in a chemical reaction, you will wind up with (whether you want it or not) a mixture of isomers of the same molecule. this is not true (in general) for biochemical systems, surprisingly: they almost always make or use only one isomer of something (whether it be fat, sugar, amino acid, nucleotide).
it is also an interesting (yet unrelated) fact that
why biological systems use only one isomer (enantiomer to be specific) of biomolecules is completely unknown. scientific tests for life on Mars have been proposed for screening the Mars terrain for any abundance of one isomer of organic molecule over another - such a find would strongly suggest the presence of life.