<HashMap><database>GEO</database><file_versions><headers><Content-Type>application/xml</Content-Type></headers><body><files><Other>ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/series/GSE294nnn/GSE294252/</Other></files><type>primary</type></body><statusCode>OK</statusCode><statusCodeValue>200</statusCodeValue></file_versions><scores/><additional><omics_type>Transcriptomics</omics_type><species>Mus musculus</species><gds_type>Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing</gds_type><full_dataset_link>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE294252</full_dataset_link><repository>GEO</repository><entry_type>GSE</entry_type></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>Inflammation- and resolution-programmed myeloid circuits govern therapeutic resistance in epithelial and mesenchymal triple-negative breast cancer</name><description>Single-cell analysis of human triple-negative breast cancer revealed heterogeneous macrophage populations with opposing phenotypes—pro-inflammatory and pro-resolution of inflammation. Paradoxically, both subsets accumulated in therapy-refractory residual tumors but showed inverse correlations across patients, suggesting mutually exclusive resistance mechanisms. Inflammatory macrophages localized preferentially to epithelial-like tumors, whereas pro-resolution macrophages were enriched in mesenchymal-like tumors. Mouse models faithfully recapitulated these patterns. After chemo-immunotherapy, mesenchymal-like tumors expanded pro-resolution macrophages through phagocytosis/efferocytosis, ω-3 fatty-acid uptake, and resolvin production. Macrophage-secreted C1q emerged as a principal antagonist of T-cell function by targeting mitochondria and inducing metabolic dysfunction. By contrast, epithelial-like tumors accumulated inflammatory macrophages and neutrophils that produced prostaglandins via ω-6 fatty-acid pathways. Knocking down ELOVL5—an elongase involved in ω-3 and ω-6 metabolism—mitigated both neutrophil- and macrophage-mediated immunosuppression. These distinct axes, driven by dysregulated inflammation and resolution programs, converged to undermine therapy-induced immunosurveillance; however, targeting their shared upstream regulators may overcome these resistance mechanisms.</description><dates><publication>2026/02/05</publication></dates><accession>GSE294252</accession><cross_references><GSM>GSM8901019</GSM><GSM>GSM8901018</GSM><GSM>GSM8901025</GSM><GSM>GSM8901022</GSM><GSM>GSM8901021</GSM><GSM>GSM8901024</GSM><GSM>GSM8901023</GSM><GSM>GSM8901020</GSM><GPL>24247</GPL><GSE>294252</GSE><taxon>Mus musculus</taxon><PMID>[41701526]</PMID></cross_references></HashMap>