In this study, we explore nucleation and the transition state ensemble of the ribosomal protein S6 using a Monte Carlo (MC) Go model in conjunction with restraints from experiment. The results are analyzed in the context of extensive experimental and evolutionary data. The roles of individual residues in the folding nucleus are identified, and the order of events in the S6 folding mechanism is explored in detail. Interpretation of our results agrees with, and extends the utility of, experiments that shift -values by modulating denaturant concentration and presents strong evidence for the realism of the mechanistic details in our MC Go model and the structural interpretation of experimental -values. We also observe plasticity in the contacts of the hydrophobic core that support the specific nucleus. For S6, which binds to RNA and protein after folding, this plasticity may result from the conformational flexibility required to achieve biological function. These results present a theoretical and conceptual picture that is relevant in understanding the mechanism of nucleation in protein folding.U nderstanding the transition state (TS) is among the major technical and intellectual milestones toward understanding the protein folding reaction (1). Several recent studies (2-6) have attempted to construct TS ensemble (TSE) structures by using -values as structural restraints in unfolding simulations. Through extensive studies of the experimentally and computationally benchmarked protein G (7), we have shown that experimental -values ( exp ) may be used in simulation to construct a putative TSE, but that measurement of a conformation's transmission coefficient (''probability to fold,'' p fold ) is the only means by which a structure may be classified as a member of the TSE. However, one must also be cautious in choosing which exp to use because the point mutations on which they are based may alter protein stability or structural features of the TSE, making normalization to the wildtype data ambiguous (8). Given that our method for studying the structure of the TSE has been validated in the complicated case of protein G folding (7), we are now able to carry out such analysis for other proteins on a comparative basis to aid in the distinction between experimental inconsistencies, noise, or artifacts and to determine the common denominators of the critical nucleus in protein folding.The split -␣- ribosomal protein S6 from Thermus thermophilus consists of 97 residues in a four-stranded -sheet packed against two ␣-helices with a hydrophobic core (9). Functionally, S6 binds to both RNA and its protein partner S18 in a cooperative manner during the intermediate stage of 30S ribosomal subunit formation (10). S6 is an ideal candidate for computational study, due to the large body of high-quality experimental data available, including extensive kinetic and -value data at varying denaturant concentrations (11), circular-permutant studies that reflect rearrangements in the TSE (12), and studies of salt-induced off-pathway intermed...