The first, recently identified, archaeal alpha-xylosidase from Sulfolobus solfataricus (XylS) shows high specificity for hydrolysis of isoprimeverose [alpha-D-xylopyranosyl-(1,6)-D-glucopyranose, (X)], the p-nitrophenyl-beta derivative of isoprimeverose, and xyloglucan oligosaccharides and has transxylosidic activity, forming, in a retaining mode, interesting alpha-xylosides. This article describes the synthesis of isoprimeverose, the disaccharidic repeating unit of xyloglucan, of the p-nitrophenyl-beta derivative of isoprimeverose, and of a trisaccharide based on isoprimeverose that is one of the trisaccharidic building blocks of xyloglucan. A substrate structure-activity relationship is recognized for both the hydrolysis and the synthesis reactions of XylS, it being a biocatalyst (i) active hydrolytically only on X-ending substrates liberating a xylose molecule and (ii) capable of transferring xylose only on the nonreducing end glucose of p-nitrophenyl-(PNP)-beta-D-cellobioside. The compounds synthesized by this enzyme are a starting point for enzymological studies of other new enzymes (i.e., xyloglucanases) for which suitable substrates are difficult to synthesize. This study also allows us to define the chemical characteristics of the xylose-transferring activity of this new archaeal enzyme, contributing to building up a library of different glycosidases with high specific selectivity for oligosaccharide synthesis.