SUMMARY
Reconstitution of artificial cells capable of transducing extracellular signals into cytoskeletal changes is a challenge in synthetic biology that will reveal fundamental principles of non-equilibrium phenomena of cellular morphogenesis and information processing. Here, we generated a ‘life-like’ Synthetic Morphogenic Membrane System (SynMMS) by encapsulating a dynamic microtubule (MT) aster and a light-inducible signaling system driven by GTP/ATP chemical potential into cell-sized vesicles. The biomimetic design of the light-induced signaling system embodies the operational principle of morphogen induced Rho-GTPase signal transduction in cells. Activation of synthetic signaling promotes membrane-deforming growth of MT-filaments by dynamically elevating the membrane-proximal concentration of tubulin. The resulting membrane deformations enable the recursive coupling of the MT-aster with the signaling system, creating global self-organized morphologies that reorganize towards external light cues in dependence on prior sensory experience that is stored in the dynamically maintained morphology. SynMMS thereby signifies a step towards bio-inspired engineering of self-organized cellular morphogenesis.