Check system support for the processor model.
Check system support for the processor model.
You'll only find out for sure if you give it a shot, or someone has used that exact CPU with that particular board (extremely improbable). It seems like a typical mATX setup with standard front I/O. OEM boards tend to have unclear labeling.
The documentation lists support from i3 2100 up to i7 2600. This suggests a sandy bridge Xeon could function in theory. However, if the motherboard's BIOS isn't compatible, it might not boot at all. I'm confident it would still work.