SummaryGCN2 is one of four “stress kinases” that block translation by phosphorylating eIF2α. GCN2 is thought to bind uncharged tRNAs to “sense” amino acid availability. In mammals, myeloid cells expressing indoleamine dioxygenases locally deplete tryptophan, which is detected by GCN2 in T cells to cause proliferative arrest. GCN2-deficient T cells were reported to ectopically enter the cell cycle when tryptophan was limiting. Using GCN2-deficient strains crossed to T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic backgrounds, we found GCN2 is essential for induction of stress target genes such as CHOP. However, GCN2-deficient CD8+ T cells fail to proliferate in limiting tryptophan, arginine, leucine, lysine, or asparagine, the opposite of what previous stu...