Stein, Ross L. "A Process Theory of Enzyme Catalytic Power - The Interplay of Science and Metaphysics." Foundations of Chemistry 8, (2006): 3-29.
Abstract
Enzymes are protein catalysts of extraordinary
efficiency, capable of bringing about rate enhancements of their
biochemical reactions that can approach factors of 1020. Theories of
enzyme catalysis, which seek to explain the means by which enzymes
effect catalytic transformation of the substrate molecules on which
they work, have evolved over that past century from the "lock-and-key"
model proposed by Emil Fischer in 1894 to models that explicitly rely
on transition state theory to the most recent theories that strive to
provide accounts that stress the essential role of protein dynamics. In
this paper, I attempt to construct a metaphysical framework within
which these new models of enzyme catalysis can be developed. This
framework is constructed from key doctrines of process thought, which
gives ontologic priority to becoming over being, as well as tenets of a
process philosophy of chemistry, which stresses environmentally
responsive molecular transformation. Enzyme catalysis can now be seen
not as enzyme acting on its substrate, but rather as enzyme and
substrate entering into a relation which allows them to traverse the
reaction coordinate as an ontologic unity.