We examined secondary structures of the ribonuclease P RNA sequences obtained from DNA databases, and identified a determinative prototype of the P12 helix peculiar to each species of hemoplasmas. This key structure will provide a rapid means for species identification of these uncultivable pathogens without making a phylogenetic tree based on alignments of nucleotide sequences. This procedure based on palindromic nucleotide substitutions at the stem portion of the P12 helix provide clear information such as the level of heterogeneity within a species, the relatedness between species, or facilitating the characterization and clustering of specific strains. In conclusion, the PNS analysis is based on the evaluation of only the strategic and highly conserved genomic region in the specificity domain of RNase P RNA.