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An imaging-based framework for studying the epithelial-to-mesenchymal state change from many different angles in both 2D and 3D

25 June 2026

Standards of State

If you think of our body as a big tube (I know I do), the epithelium is the sheet of specialised cells that cover the outside and line the inside (the gut; as well as covering and lining organs). In the process called epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is normal and necessary in embryo/organ development and wound healing, epithelial cells can switch to being multi-potent, migratory stem cells. But EMT also has a dark side underlying cancer initiation and migration and so, alongside advancing the understanding of normal activity, studying EMT is central to wide-ranging research. Here, aiming to standardise approaches so that results can be meaningfully compared between laboratories, an imaging-based framework has been developed for studying this state change from many different angles in both 2D and 3D

Read the published research article here

Written by Lindsey Goff

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