Planar Cell Polarity (PCP)-like signaling has recently been linked to multiple aspects of nervous system development and wiring. We have found that a PCP-like pathway involving PRKL-1 and VANG-1 is required for DD motor neuron position along the AP axis. The six DD neurons (DD1-6) are normally positioned equidistant from each other in the ventral nerve cord. In
prkl-1 and, to a lesser extent,
vang-1 mutants, DD neurons are shifted anteriorly and display distinctive cell spacing defects. These positioning defects can be rescued by
prkl-1 or
vang-1 expression from a pan-neuronal promoter, suggesting cell-autonomous roles. Conversely, over-expression of neuronally-expressed
prkl-1 results in posteriorly shifted DD neurons. Interestingly, the strong anterior shift in
prkl-1 mutants can be suppressed by simultaneous loss of
vang-1, suggesting that PRKL-1 normally antagonizes VANG-1 function in DD neurons. A candidate screen of known Wnt and PCP mutants revealed
prkl-1 and
vang-1-like DD positioning and spacing phenotypes in several other genes including
mom-2/WNT and
let-502/ROCK. Ectopic expression of MOM-2, which is normally expressed in the posterior embryo, from the more anteriorly expressing
cwn-1 promoter was sufficient to induce DD positioning defects similar to those of loss-of-function mutants. Taken together, these data suggest a role for a PCP-like pathway in regulating neuronal cell body placement or spacing (tiling) along the ventral nerve cord in the embryo, a process which may involve an instructive role for Wnts along the AP axis.