RESUMEN
A program implementing a flux model of Escherichia coli metabolism was used to analyze the effects of the addition of amino acids (tryptophan, tyrosine, phenylalanine, leucine, isoleucine, valine, histidine, lysine, threonine, cysteine, methionine, arginine, proline) to minimal medium or media lacking nitrogen, carbon, or both. The overall response of the metabolic system to the addition of various amino acids to the minimal medium is similar. Glycolysis and the synthesis of pyruvate with its subsequent degradation to acetate via acetyl-CoA become more efficient, whereas the fluxes through the pentose phosphate pathway and the TCA cycle decrease. If amino acids are used as the sole source of carbon, nitrogen, or both, the changes in the flux distribution are determined mainly by the carbon limitation. The phosphoenolpyruvate to glucose-6-phosphate flux increases; the flux through the pentose phosphate path is directed towards ribulose-5-phosphate. Other changes are determined by the compounds that are the primary products of catabolism of the added amino acid.