“…A list of 56 genes related to intestinal health were selected according to the bibliography [ 18 , 19 , 20 , 21 , 22 , 23 , 24 , 25 , 26 , 27 , 28 , 29 , 30 , 31 ] and included: (1) genes participating in the barrier function ( OCLN , ZO1 , CLDN1 , CLDN4 , CLDN15 , MUC2 , MUC13 and TFF3 ); (2) genes that play an important role in the immune response, such as pattern recognition receptors, cytokines, chemokines and stress proteins ( TLR2 , TLR4 , IL1B , IL6 , IL8 , IL10 , IL17A , IL22 , IFNG , TNF , TGFB1 , CCL20 , CXCL2 , IFNGR1 , HSPB1 , HSPA4 , REG3G , PPARGC1A , FAXDC2 and GBP1 ); (3) genes coding for enzymes and hormones implicated in the digestion process ( GPX2 , SOD2 , ALPI , SI , DAO1 , HNMT , APN , IDO1 , GCG , CCK , IGF1R and PYY ); (4) genes involved in nutrient transport ( SLC5A1 , SLC16A1 , SLC7A8 , SLC15A1 , SLC13A1 , SLC11A2 , MT1A , SLC30A1 and SLC39A4 ); (5) genes involved in stress response ( CRHR1 , NR3C1 and HSD11B1 ); and (6) four reference genes ( ACTB , B2M , GAPDH and TBP ).…”