We have shown previously that, in less than 4 ms, the unfolded/oxidized hen lysozyme recovered its native secondary structure, while the reduced protein remained fully unfolded. To investigate the role played by disulfide bridges in the acquisition of the secondary structure at later stages of the renaturation/oxidation, the complete refolding of reduced lysozyme was studied. This was done in a renaturation buffer containing 0.5 M guanidinium chloride, 60 M oxidized glutathione, and 20 M reduced dithiothreitol, in which the aggregation of lysozyme was minimized and where a renaturation yield of 80% was obtained. The refolded protein could not be distinguished from the native lysozyme by activity, compactness, stability, and several spectroscopic measurements. The kinetics of renaturation were then studied by following the reactivation and the changes in fluorescence and circular dichroism signals. When bi-or triphasic sequential models were fitted to the experimental data, the first two phases had the same calculated rate constants for all the signals showing that, within the time resolution of these experiments, the folding/oxidation of hen lysozyme is highly cooperative, with the secondary structure, the tertiary structure, and the integrity of the active site appearing simultaneously.Since Anfinsen's work on the in vitro renaturation of unfolded ribonuclease A (1), it is commonly accepted that all the information required for a protein to fold properly is contained in its amino acid sequence. However, the code that allows the formation of a fully folded protein from its amino acid sequence has not yet been deciphered. Three models are currently proposed to describe this process. The framework model is a sequential model in which secondary structure elements form first followed by a tighter packing of the molecule (2). Another model assumes that the polypeptide chain undergoes a rapid collapse driven by hydrophobic forces that would yield an intermediate close to the molten globule (3). In the puzzle model (4) structural elements form at different sites on the polypeptide chain, and their formation induces further folding of the whole protein.According to experimental data, it is not yet possible to determine which model most accurately describes the folding mechanism. However, some general features of protein folding have arisen. Stopped-flow circular dichroism studies showed that a large amount of secondary structure is formed in the dead time (milliseconds time range) of the observation. This has been observed for proteins such as ␣-lactalbumin and lysozyme (5), dihydrofolate reductase (6), and holocytochrome c (7). On the other hand, when using pulsed proton exchange followed by NMR identification of the protected protons, the formation of stable secondary structure elements could be detected over a slower observable time range (8, 9). Using both techniques to observe the folding of the same protein, as was the case for cytochrome c (7), lysozyme (10, 11), and interleukin-1 (12), secondary structures coul...