Abstract. Forest fires are major contributors of reactive gas- and particle-phase organic compounds to the atmosphere. We used offline high resolution tandem mass spectrometry to perform a molecular-level speciation of evolving gas- and particle-phase compounds sampled via aircraft from a boreal forest fire in Saskatchewan, Canada. We observed diverse multifunctional compounds containing oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur (CHONS), whose structure, formation, and impacts are understudied. The abundance of particle-phase CHONS species increased with plume age, from 19 % to 40 % of the relative abundance of observed functionalized OA over the first 4 hours of downwind transport. The relative contribution of particle-phase sulfide functional groups increased with age from 4 % to 40 % of observed OA abundance, and were present in up to 75 % of CHONS compounds. The increases in sulfides were accompanied by increases in ring-bound nitrogen, and both increased together with CHONS prevalence. A complex mixture of intermediate- and semi-volatile gas-phase organic sulfur species was emitted from the fire and depleted downwind, representing potential precursors to particle-phase CHONS compounds. These results demonstrate CHONS formation from nitrogen/oxygen-containing biomass burning emissions in the presence of reduced sulfur species, and highlight chemical pathways that may also be relevant in situations with elevated levels of nitrogen and sulfur emissions from residential biomass burning and fossil fuel use (e.g. coal), respectively.