One
 of the major differences between laboratory organic reactions (which 
generally take place free in solution) and biological organic reactions 
(which generally  take place within the very specific, ordered 
environment of an enzyme) involves the concepts of stereoselectivity and stereospecificity.  In a stereoselective reaction, one  stereoisomer is formed preferentially over other possible stereoisomers:
In section 14.1, we will learn about a reaction type in which a water molecule is ‘added’ to a double bond. 
In many cases, this reaction results in 
the formation of one, or possibly two new stereocenters, depending on 
the symmetry of the starting alkene double bond.  Nonenzymatic 
laboratory reactions of this type generally are not stereospecific – 
that is, they result in the formation of mixtures of different 
stereoisomers.  In contrast, a crucial aspect of enzyme-catalyzed 
biological chemistry is that reactions are almost always highly 
stereoselective, meaning that they result in the formation of only one 
specific stereoisomer.  For example, this water addition reaction occurs
 as part of the oxidation of fatty acids:
Enzymatic reactions are also highly stereospecific:
 this means that an enzyme ‘recognizes’ the stereochemistry of a 
substrate molecule and only catalyzes its reaction if the substrate 
stereochemistry is correct. 
The enzyme that catalyzes the alkylation of (S)-glycerol phosphate, for example, will not work at all with (R)-glycerol phosphate.
When we begin our study of how organic 
reactions are catalyzed by enzymes, the reasons for their remarkable 
stereoselectivity and stereospecificity will become apparent.
After reading the story about 
thalidomide at the beginning of our discussion of stereochemistry, you 
have a good appreciation for the importance of stereoisomerism in drug 
development.  It is much safer and more effective if a drug can be 
provided in stereochemically pure form, without the presence of other 
ineffective (and possibly dangerous) enantiomers or diastereomers. Drug 
that are obtained from nature are generally in stereochemically pure 
form to begin with, because they are synthesized in a living organism by
 a series of enzymatic reactions. Penicillin, with its three 
stereocenters and 8 possible stereoisomers, is a good example: as a 
product synthesized by specific enzymes in penicillum mold, it exists as a single stereoisomer.
 
 
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