Controlling the dynamics of mixed
communities of cell-like entities
(protocells) provides a step toward the development of higher-order
cytomimetic behaviors in artificial cell consortia. In this paper,
we develop a caged protocell model with a molecularly crowded coacervate
interior surrounded by a non-cross-linked gold (Au)/poly(ethylene
glycol) (PEG) nanoparticle-jammed stimuli-responsive membrane. The
jammed membrane is unlocked by either exogenous light-mediated Au/PEG
dissociation at the Au surface or endogenous enzyme-mediated cleavage
of a ketal linkage on the PEG backbone. The membrane assembly/disassembly
process is used for the controlled and selective uptake of guest protocells
into the caged coacervate microdroplets as a path toward an all-water
model of triggerable transmembrane uptake in synthetic protocell communities.
Active capture of the guest protocells stems from the high sequestration
potential of the coacervate interior such that tailoring the surface
properties of the guest protocells provides a rudimentary system of
protocell sorting. Our results highlight the potential for programming
surface-contact interactions between artificial membrane-bounded compartments
and could have implications for the development of protocell networks,
storage and delivery microsystems, and microreactor technologies