The kinetic folding mechanism of truncated sIGPS (Scheme 1) was previously postulated based on the results of stopped-flow and manual-mixing circular dichroism (CD) experiments.5 The urea-denatured state, U, is presumed to fold within milliseconds to a highly-structured intermediate, Ia, that is also highly populated under equilibrium conditions at 5 M urea. Ia converts to another stable intermediate, Ib, via a slow, ~100 s, urea-independent conformational rearrangement reaction before proceeding to the native state, N. The Ib → N reaction is another slow but urea-dependent step consistent with the burial of additional surface area required to achieve the full TIM barrel fold. Given the extensive protection against exchange observed for Ia in a previous HX-MS study of the equilibrium intermediates,24 the products of a quenched-flow pulse-labeling were expected to display similar pattern of protection in the same (βα)2–5β6 region of sIGPS within the first few milliseconds of folding. If, however, the product of the burst-phase reaction is a collapsed form of the unfolded state, the protection should be minimal throughout the sequence.