We use inverse methods of statistical mechanics and computer simulations to investigate whether an isotropic interaction designed to stabilize a given two-dimensional lattice will also favor an analogous three-dimensional structure, and vice versa. Specifically, we determine the 3D-ordered lattices favored by isotropic potentials optimized to exhibit stable 2D honeycomb (or square) periodic structures, as well as the 2D-ordered structures favored by isotropic interactions designed to stabilize 3D diamond (or simple cubic) lattices. We find a remarkable "transferability" of isotropic potentials designed to stabilize analogous morphologies in 2D and 3D, irrespective of the exact interaction form, and we discuss the basis of this cross-dimensional behavior. Our results suggest that the discovery of interactions that drive assembly into certain 3D periodic structures of interest can be assisted by less computationally intensive optimizations targeting the analogous 2D lattices. Material properties are intimately linked to structural characteristics featured at various length scales. Thus, discovering new ways to create materials with prescribed morphologies is a key challenge in their design for specific applications. In addition to the development of top-down material fabrication strategies, there has been considerable progress in bottom-up approaches in which the primary components (molecules, nanoparticles, colloids, etc.) A critical part of any self-assembly design problem is understanding how tunable aspects of the interactions affect the thermodynamic stability of competing assembled states with different morphologies. For nanoscale to microscale particles, this understanding has been guided in part via exploratory experiments and simulations to characterize the structures that spontaneously form from systems with various particle chemistries [7,8], shapes [9][10][11][12][13][14][15], and surface properties [16][17][18][19], as well as different dispersing solvents [20] and mixtures of assembling particles [21,22]. Highly coordinated lattices with, e.g., face-centered cubic or hexagonal symmetries in three dimensions [7] and triangular symmetry in two dimensions [23] are commonly observed in the experimental assembly of monodisperse particles with short-range, isotropic interactions. A broader array of thermodynamically stable 3D structures-including low-coordinated diamond and simple cubic (Sc) lattices of interest for technological applications [24,25]