A) Mammalian Class I NPFs contain C-terminal WCA domains that bind G-actin and the Arp2/3 complex, plus diverse N-terminal regulatory regions. Microbial pathogens also express Class I NPFs. These include ActA from Listeria, RickA from Rickettsia, and P78/83 from baculoviruses. Class II NPFs contain N-terminal acidic domains that bind the Arp2/3 complex, central F-actin-binding repeats, and regulatory C-terminal domains. A, acidic; AI, autoinhibitory; B, basic; C, connector; CC, coiled-coil; CRIB, Cdc42-Rac-interactive-binding; L, linker; N, amino-terminal; P, polyproline; PRD, proline-rich-domain; R, repeat; SH3, Src-homology-3; SHD, Scar-homology-domain; TBR, tubulin-binding region; W, WASP-homology-2 (WH2) domain; WH1, WASP-homology-1; WAHD1, WASH-homology-domain-1; WMD, WHAMM-membrane interaction-domain.
B) N-WASP NPF activity is regulated both by autoinhibition and by interactions with proteins from the WIP family. It can be stimulated by direct binding of phosphoinositides, small GTPases, tyrosine phosphorylation, and SH2/SH3 domains. WAVE2 activity is controlled by a protein complex comprised of Brk1, Abi1, Nap1, and Sra1. It is stimulated by Nck-Nap1 and Rac-Sra1 interactions, or by binding of phosphoinositides or SH3 domains to WAVE2 itself. WASH activity is likely controlled by a multi-subunit complex that contains capping protein (CP) and FAM21. WHAMM NPF activity does not appear to be autoinhibited, and is likely to be controlled by factors that interact with its WMD and/or CC regions. Question marks (?) indicate that the depicted mechanism of activation is speculative.