Life-like processes in synthetic protocells under external fields Willems, Vivien Moreno Reolid, Pablo Fojo, José Rodríguez Arco, Laura Álvarez, Laura protocells nonequilibrium Biomimetic Synthetic protocells are self-assembled compartments designed to reproduce minimal features of prebiotic boundaries through bottom-up assembly. They offer a controlled platform to isolate universal physicochem ical principles relevant to both origins-of-life studies and life-like soft materials. Despite improved control over composition and architecture, most current protocells remain weakly dissipative and near reversible in contrast to living cells sustained by continuous nonequilibrium fluxes. Because autonomous energy trans duction is often absent, external fields are used to actuate compartments and induce life-like functions. This perspective reviews field-responsive protocells and analyzes how light, electric, and magnetic inputs couple to material properties to generate morphological transitions, transport, and adaptive responses. We intro duce a classification of actuation regimes and a framework to separate passive forced behavior from genuine nonequilibrium internal state changes. We further outline strategies to quantify state variables, fluxes, and dissipation and propose hybrid designs coupling external actuation with internal energy transduction for adaptive, multiresponsive protocells. 2026-03-17T09:01:29Z 2026-03-17T09:01:29Z 2026-04-06 journal article Published version: Willems, V., Moreno, P., Fojo, J., Rodríguez-Arco, L., & Alvarez, L. (2026). Life-like processes in synthetic protocells under external fields. Newton, 100444, 100444. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newton.2026.100444 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/112201 10.1016/j.newton.2026.100444 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ open access Atribución 4.0 Internacional Elsevier