“…Physical laws describing the dewetting of liquids provide a theoretical framework to define the relationship between centripetal forces generated by the spreading of intoxicated cells, underlying the nucleation and growth of tunnels, and forces acting against the widening of TEMs, referred to as line tension (Gonzalez‐Rodriguez, Maddugoda, et al, ). The balance between these antagonist forces accounts for the stabilisation of TEMs and can be quantitatively studied by a laser ablation‐based approaches pointing for the importance of a time‐dependent build‐up of actomyosin cable encircling TEMs to stop their enlargement (Stefani et al, ). Noteworthy, TEM tunnels are also induced by a group of bacterial toxins catalysing a rise of cyclic‐AMP concentration, including the oedema toxin from Bacillus anthracis (Maddugoda et al, ; Figure ).…”