Inside-out spinach thylakoid vesicles can be isolated by aqueous polymer two-phase partition following mechanical disruption of spinach chloroplast lamellae (Andersson, B and Åkerlund, H.-E. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 503, 462–472) and a mechanism for their formation has been experimentally supported (Andersson B., Sundby, C. and Albertsson, P.-Å. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 599, 391–402). Upon disruption, inside-out vesicles may form under stacking conditions, e.g., in 5 mM MgCl 2 or 150 mM NaCl, while disruption under destacking conditions, i.e., low concentrations of monovalent cations, gives only right-side-out vesicles. This study deals with the sidedness stability of the isolated inside-out thylakoid vesicles when stored or disrupted by sonication in various ionic environments. The sidedness of thylakoid vesicles was determined by their partition behaviour in an aqueous polymer phase system, direction of proton translocation and aggregation response (stacking) upon addition of MgCl 2. The results show that no spontaneous change from everted to normal sidedness occurs upon storage of the inside-out thylakoids. In contrast, sonication of these vesicles under destacking conditions (5 mM NaCl) results in a nearly complete transformation to right-side-out orientation. Also, in the presence of 5 mM MgCl 2 or 150 mM NaCl, sonication induced a change in sidedness of the inside-out vesicles but to a lesser extent. The stabilizing effect on the everted sidedness by cations was shown to be a result of preventing vesicle fragmentation by maintaining internal thylakoid appresions rather than by influencing the membrane curvature during resealing. Once released from an appressed state by overcoming the stacking forces, an opened thylakoid membrane shows an absolute preference for turning right-side-out in all media tested. These results strongly support the proposed formation mechanism, in which pairs of neighbouring grana membranes after disruption reseal with each other promoted by their close proximity. Since the inside-out vesicles derive from the grana appressions, their transformation back to normal sidedness exposes the outer membrane surface of appressed thylakoids. This region of the thylakoid membrane is normally hidden in the grana appressions and removal of grana leads concomitantly to lateral intermixing with non-appressed thylakoid components. Thus the current isolation of right-sided vesicles derived from the grana appressions should be a new tool for studies on the molecular organization of the thylakoid membrane.