alpha-Helical coiled coils have a 7-residue repeating pattern (abcdefg) where a and d are usually hydrophobic. We have designed a 2-stranded 44-residue coiled-coil protein (P44) consisting of 2 22-residue alpha-helices linked by 2 terminal disulfide groups to test whether the disulfide bridges could stabilize a 3-heptad coiled coil. P44 should be stabilized by intrahelical hydrogen bonds, interhelical disulfide and salt bridges, and interior hydrophobic interactions. A computer model of P44 was built and its stability was studied by molecular dynamics simulation with explicit water. This doubly crosslinked 3-heptad coiled coil did not unfold during a 300-ps simulation with explicit water. This doubly crosslinked 3-heptad coiled coil did not unfold during a 300-ps simulation. But reduced P44 with 4 thiol groups did unfold. For comparison, the 62-residue crystal structure of the 4-heptad coiled coil of transcription activator GCN4 did not unfold during a 300-ps simulation. Thus P44 may be a stable folded protein in aqueous solution. These simulations revealed the presence of 2 local hydrogen bond networks involving intra-helical 3-center hydrogen bonds in the hydrophobic interior of the coiled coils of GCN4 and P44. The NH hydrogen at d makes a 3-center hydrogen bond whose major component is to the i - 4 C = O oxygen at g and minor component is to the solvent-inaccessible i - 3 C = O oxygen at a. Likewise, the NH hydrogen at g makes a 3-center hydrogen bond with the i - 4 C = O oxygen at c and the buried i - 3 C = O oxygen at d.