As flyboy2160 says, if you have to ask, its probably not something you want to be looking at doing. However for the sake of humouring your interest, assess what you know and would have been taught in structural analysis about torsion and the equations of EBT. If you need a recap on that, look here:
http://www.roymech.co.uk/Useful_Tables/ ... rsion.html.
Carbon fibre is a well known orthotropic material, or at the very least a partially anisotropic material. So in short, yes, the direction of the laying of fibres will certainly affect your torsional modulus of rigidity, which will in turn affect how much your suspension will twist, and the shape of your wishbone will affect this too (think second moment of inertia). However if I am honest, that is about as far as my knowledge extends - carbon fibre is notoriously tricky even under static loads, however under dynamic loading (which is basically the constant state for suspension) it is exceptionally difficult to model. The 787 is famed for being built mainly from CFRP despite the Boeing engineers not fully understanding the response under dynamic loading. Please also consider - do you have the facilities to reliably lay up CFRP suspension to a high tolerance? The last thing you want is two suspension struts on either side of your car which behave in different ways.
My advice would be to listen to flyboy2160 and look at an aluminium or (more likely) steel thin wall structure, with welded blocks at the ends to reinforce the pickups. I think I a right to say that F1 is virtually the ONLY racing series in the world to use CFRP suspension and for good reason - not only is it ultra-stiff it allows them to make aerodynamically neutral suspension (to gain a benefit from it would contravene the rules) which is important at their speeds but much less so at Formula Student speeds. I have worked on cars with carbon monocoques (which I would be very surprised if your car was) and they don't use CFRP suspension - its too complicated and it is not that much of a gain. There are much better ways to improve your car.