Neuronal interleukin-34 (IL-34) promotes the expansion of microglia in the central nervous system—microglial activation and expansion are in turn implicated in the pathogenesis of Huntington‘s disease (HD). We thus examined whether the accumulation of an amyloidogenic exon-1 fragment of mutant huntingtin (mHTTx1) modulates the expression of IL-34 in dopaminergic neurons derived from a human embryonic stem cell line. We found that mHTTx1 aggregates induce IL-34 production selectively in post-mitotic neurons. Exposure of neurons to DNA damaging agents or the excitotoxin NMDA elicited similar results suggesting that IL-34 induction may be a general response to neuronal stress including the accumulation of misfolded mHTTx1. We further determined that knockdown or blocking the activity of IκB kinase beta (IKKβ) prevented the aggregation of mHTTx1 and subsequent IL-34 production. While elevated IL-34 itself had no effect on the aggregation or the toxicity of mHTTx1 in neuronal culture, IL-34 expression in a rodent brain slice model with intact neuron-microglial networks exacerbated mHTTx1-induced degeneration of striatal medium-sized spiny neurons. Conversely, an inhibitor of the IL-34 receptor reduced microglial numbers and ameliorated mHTTx1-mediated neurodegeneration. Together, these findings uncover a novel function for IKKβ/mHTTx1 interactions in regulating IL-34 production, and implicate a role for IL-34 in non-cell-autonomous, microglial-dependent neurodegeneration in HD.