Hydrophobic interactions are responsible for stabilizing leucine zippers in peptides containing heptad repeats. The effects of substituting leucine by phenylalanine and alanine by glycine on the self-assembly of coiled-coils were examined in minimalist antimicrobial peptides designed to form amphipathic alpha-helices, The secondary structure of these peptides was monitored in solution and in diphosphocholine (DPC) micelles using circular dichroism spectroscopy. The leucine peptides (KLAKLAK)(3) and (KLAKKLA)(n) (n = 3, 4) become alpha-helical with increasing concentrations of salt, peptide, and DPC. The aggregation state and equilibrium constant for self-association of the peptides were measured by sedimentation equilibrium. The glycine peptide (KLGKKLG)(3) does not self-associate, The leucine peptides and phenylalanine peptides (KFAKFAK)(3) and (KFAKKFA)(n) (n = 3, 4) are in a monomer-tetramer equilibrium in solution, with the phenylalanine zippers being 2-4 kcal/mol less stable than the equivalent leucine zippers, Thermodynamic parameters for the association reaction were calculated from the temperature dependence of the association constants. Leucine zipper formation has Delta C-p = 0, whereas phenylalanine zipper formation has a small negative Delta C-p, presumably due to the removal of the larger surface area of phenylalanine from water. Self-association of the peptides is coupled to formation of a hydrophobic core as detected using 1-anilino-naphthalene-8-sulfonate fluorescence. Carboxyfluorescein-labeled peptides were used to determine the aggregation stale of (KLAKKLA)(3) and (KLGKKLG)(3) in DPC micelles, (KLAKKLA)(3) forms dimers, and (KLGKKLG)(3) is a monomer. Aggregation appears to correlate with the cytotoxicity of these peptides.