Structural models of large and dynamic molecular complexes are appearing in increasing numbers, in large part because of recent technical advances in cryo-electron microscopy. However, the inherent complexity of such biological assemblies comprising dozens of moving parts often limits the resolution of structural models and leaves the puzzle as to how each functional configuration transitions to the next. Orthogonal biochemical information is crucial to understanding the molecular interactions that drive those rearrangements. We present a two-step method for chemical probing detected by tandem mass-spectrometry to globally assess the reactivity of lysine residues within purified macromolecular complexes. Because lysine side chains often balance the negative charge of RNA in ribonucleoprotein complexes, the method is especially useful for detecting changes in protein-RNA interactions. By probing the E. coli 30S ribosome subunit, we established that the reactivity pattern of lysine residues quantitatively reflects structure models derived from X-ray crystallography. We also used the strategy to assess differences in three conformations of purified human spliceosomes in the context of recent cryo-electron microscopy models. Our results demonstrate that the probing method yields powerful biochemical information that helps contextualize architectural rearrangements of intermediate resolution structures of macromolecular complexes, often solved in multiple conformations.