BC-1 RNA is a brain-specific small RNA transcript of identifier sequences present in the somas and dendrites of neurons. We recently reported that the RNA is complexed with a protein(s) to form a 10 S ribonucleoprotein particle (Kobayashi, S., Goto, S., and Anzai, K. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 4726-4730). We demonstrate here that this 10 S BC-1 ribonucleoprotein particle contains a DNA-binding protein(s) (Bp-1 protein) capable of interacting with a region between split promoter sequences for RNA polymerase III within the identifier sequences. The region has short inverted repeats: a perfect octanucleotide repeat (GCGCTTGCCTAGCAAGCGC) and an imperfect heptanucleotide repeat (GCCTAGCAAGCGCAAGGC), each of which contains a GCAAG/CTTGC motif. We also demonstrate that the binding of this protein either to the array of pentamer motifs or to BC-1 RNA is mutually exclusive. The molecular masses of photo-cross-linking adducts of Bp-1 protein to a 32P-labeled GCAAG/CTTGC motif-specific probe were estimated to be about 31 and 36 kDa, indicating that two species of Bp-1 proteins may be present in the brain.