<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/GSE298nnn/GSE298319/</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=GSE298319</full_dataset_link><repository>GEO</repository><entry_type>GSE</entry_type></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>Inflammatory epiCaspase-1 dampens immunogenic cell death by remotely skewing bone marrow hematopoiesis to drive systemic neutrophil-dominant inflammation</name><description>While local immunological effects of chemotherapy-induced tumor cell death are well studied, its systemic impact on distant bone marrow—a site essential for immune cell maturation—remains underexplored. Here, we show that gemcitabine chemotherapy induces inflammatory caspase-1 activation in epithelial cancer cells (epiCaspase-1), triggering pyroptotic cell death. Despite its inflammatory nature, epiCaspase-1 mediated cell death is non-immunogenic. Clinically, cancer patients with high expression of a newly derived epiCaspase-1 gene signature show poorer outcomes. Mechanistically, epiCaspase-1 induces noncanonical release of IL-1α through NINJ1 lytic pores, which remotely skews bone marrow hematopoiesis towards granulocyte-monocyte progenitors and mature neutrophil output. This systemic alteration leads to a heightened neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) in both peripheral blood and the tumor microenvironment. Notably, pharmaceutic inhibition of caspase-1 blocks this cascade, normalizes hematopoiesis, and recalibrates NLR to favor intratumoral CD8+ T cell infiltration and activation—ultimately improving chemotherapeutic efficacy. These findings underscore that inflammatory pyroptosis is not inherently immunogenic, instead, it reshapes systemic immune landscape towards neutrophil-dominant inflammation in the chemotherapy context.</description><dates><publication>2026/02/06</publication></dates><accession>GSE298319</accession><cross_references><GSM>GSM9011997</GSM><GSM>GSM9012003</GSM><GSM>GSM9012004</GSM><GSM>GSM9012001</GSM><GSM>GSM9012002</GSM><GSM>GSM9012000</GSM><GSM>GSM9011998</GSM><GSM>GSM9011999</GSM><GPL>24247</GPL><GSE>298319</GSE><taxon>Mus musculus</taxon></cross_references></HashMap>