Complex biochemical pathways or regulatory enzyme kinetics can be reduced to
chains of elementary reactions, which can be described in terms of chemical
kinetics. This discipline provides a set of tools for quantifying and
understanding the dialogue between reactants, whose framing into a solid and
consistent mathematical description is of pivotal importance in the growing
field of biotechnology. Among the elementary reactions so far extensively
investigated, we recall the socalled Michaelis-Menten scheme and the Hill
positive-cooperative kinetics, which apply to molecular binding and are
characterized by the absence and the presence, respectively, of cooperative
interactions between binding sites, giving rise to qualitative different
phenomenologies. However, there is evidence of reactions displaying a more
complex, and by far less understood, pattern: these follow the
positive-cooperative scenario at small substrate concentration, yet
negative-cooperative effects emerge and get stronger as the substrate
concentration is increased. In this paper we analyze the structural analogy
between the mathematical backbone of (classical) reaction kinetics in Chemistry
and that of (classical) mechanics in Physics: techniques and results from the
latter shall be used to infer properties on the former