One example of a mold that uses the enzyme is
Aspergillus carbonarius; where the enzyme creates an intermediate for the
pentose phosphate pathway. D-xylose is converted to xylitol by
xylose reductase, then xylitol is converted to xylulose by D-xylulose reductase, afterwards xylulose is converted to xylulose-5-phosphate by
xylulokinase and xylulose-5-P then goes into the pentose phosphate pathway for energy and intermediates production. In yeast, such as
Hansenula polymorpha d-xylulose reductase has been found to help ferment xylose into ethanol, however it usually results in an accumulation of xylitol due to the imbalance between cofactor preferences in xylose reductase and xylulose reductase. In fungi d-xylulose reductase also ferments xylose into ethanol as a result of metabolic conditions (such as anaerobic conditions). ==See also==