The JCI is the publication of the American Society for Clinical Investigation, an honor society of physician-scientists.

Copyright © The American Society for Clinical Investigation.
Copying, redistribution, and other usage policies
December 2008: View the entire issue
Cover story: Esophageal stem cells
The esophagus is exposed to a wide variety of injurious agents, and the cells that line it can regenerate and differentiate quickly to form a continuous barrier. Kalabis and colleagues have now identified and characterized a population of putative stem cells responsible for the maintenance of the esophageal epithelium (page 3860).
Also inside:
Cytokines are small protein mediators involved in essentially all biological processes. As such, abnormalities in cytokines, their receptors, and the signaling pathways that they initiate are involved in a wide variety of diseases. This Review Series discusses the important role of cytokines and their receptors in just a few of these diseases, specifically three chronic inflammatory disease areas and two forms of cancer, highlighting their potential as therapeutic targets.
Global Health
View previous series
Harnessing endogenous miR-181a to segregate transgenic antigen receptor expression in developing versus post-thymic T cells in murine hematopoietic chimeras
IRBIT coordinates epithelial fluid and HCO3secretion by stimulating the transporters pNBC1 and CFTR in the murine pancreatic duct
Apoptotic human cells inhibit migration of granulocytes via release of lactoferrin