Carbonic anhydrase VII (CA VII) appears to be the most highly conserved of the active mammalian carbonic anhydrases. We have characterized the catalytic activity and inhibition properties of a recombinant murine CA VII. CA VII has steady-state constants similar to two of the most active isozymes of carbonic anhydrase, CA II and IV; also, it is very strongly inhibited by the sulfonamides ethoxzolamide and acetazolamide, yielding the lowest Ki values measured by the exchange of O-18 between CO2 and water for any of the mammalian isozymes of carbonic anhydrase, The catalytic measurements of the hydration of CO2 and the dehydration of HCO3- were made by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and the exchange of O-18 using mass spectrometry, Unlike the other isozymes of this class of CA, for which k(cat)/K-m is described by the single ionization of zinc-bound water, CA VII exhibits a pH profile for k(cat)/K-m for CO2 hydration described by two ionizations at pK(a) 6.2 and 7.5, with a maximum approaching 8 x 10(7) M-1 s(-1). The pH dependence of k(cat)/K-m for the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate could also be described by these two ionizations, yielding a maximum of 71 M-1 s(-1) at pH > 9, Using a novel method that compares rates of O-18 exchange and dehydration of HCO3-, we assigned values for the apparent pK(a) at 6.2 to the zinc-bound water and the pK(a) of 7.5 to His 64, The magnitude of k(cat), its pH profile, O-18-exchange data for both wild-type and a H64A mutant, and inhibition by CuSO4 and acrolein suggest that the histidine at position 64 is functioning as a proton-transfer group and is responsible for one of the observed ionizations, A truncation mutant of CA VII, in which 23 residues from the amino-terminal end were deleted, has its rate constant for intramolecular proton transfer decreased by an order of magnitude with no change in k(cat)/K-m. This suggests a role for the amino-terminal end in enhancing proton transfer in catalysis by carbonic anhydrase.