Suggested metabolic model wherein major determinants of glycogen metabolism include the PhoP-PhoQ regulatory system activated under low extracellular Mg2+ concentration conditions, intracellular concentration of Mg-bound ATP necessary for ADPG synthesis (determined by extracellular Mg2+ concentration, transport of Mg2+ across membranes, ATP synthesis and consumption, and adenylate kinase (Adk) activity), levels of AMP (the main GlgC inhibitor and indicator of low energetic status of the cell), levels of ppGpp (which accumulates in a RelA- SpoT- and/or Gpp-dependent manner under conditions of limited provision of nutrients such as amino acids, sulfur, iron, etc.), factors determining intercellular communication, aggregative and social behavior modes (which in turn determine the nutritional status of the cell), levels of cAMP, expression levels of the general stress regulator RpoS and of the global regulators CsrA and Hfq, availability of a carbon source, redox status of the cell, and less well-defined systems sensing the cell energy status through the activity of the electron transport chain (ETC). sRNAs, represented by stem-loops, are likely involved in the regulation of functions strongly affecting glycogen accumulation through interaction with CsrA and Hfq. According to this model, under conditions of limited nutrient provision, a decreased demand in ATP-dependent protein and nucleic acid synthesis will take place, and excess ATP will be used for glycogen biosynthesis when a carbon source is present in the medium.