It is difficult to determine the structural stability of the individual subunits or protomers of many proteins in the cell that exist in an oligomeric or complexed state. In this study, we used single-molecule force spectroscopy on seven subunits of covalently linked cochaperonin GroES (ESC7) to evaluate the structural stability of the subunit. A modified form of ESC7 was immobilized on a mica surface. The force-extension profile obtained from the mechanical unfolding of this ESC7 showed a distinctive sawtooth pattern that is typical for multimodular proteins. When analyzed according to the worm-like chain model, the contour lengths calculated from the peaks in the profile suggested that linkedGroES subunits unfold in distinct steps after the oligomeric ring structure of ESC7 is disrupted. The evidence that structured subunits of ESC7 withstand external force to some extent even after the perturbation of the oligomeric ring structure suggests that a stable monomeric intermediate is an important component of the equilibrium unfolding reaction of GroES.Keywords: force spectroscopy; mechanical unfolding intermediates; protein subunit stability; covalently linked oligomeric protein; GroES; cpn10Abbreviations: AFM, atomic force microscopy; CH-ESC7, ESC7 that has two-cysteine residues and six-histidine residues extending from the N terminus and C terminus, respectively; ESC7, engineered form of cochaperonin GroES with covalently linked subunits; Gdn-HCl, guanidine hydrochloride; PBS, phosphate saline buffer.