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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Jan 9.
Published in final edited form as: J Proteome Res. 2016 Apr 1;15(5):1524–1533. doi: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00006

Table 1.

Top 15 Most Abundant Proteins in Eosinophils

rank gene name protein name peptides differentiating peptides sequence coverage [%] iBAQ
1 ACTB Actin, cytoplasmic 1; Actin, cytoplasmic 1, N-terminally processed 62   1      85% 1.246 × 1011
2 RNASE2 Nonsecretory ribonuclease 10 10      41% 1.107 × 1011
3 HIST1H4A Histone H4 21 21      65% 1.105 × 1011
4 HIST1H2AJ; HIST1H2AH; HIST1H2AG; H2AFJ; HIST2H2AC; HIST2H2AA3; HIST1H2AA Histone H2A type 1-J; Histone H2A type 1-H; Histone H2A type 1; Histone H2A. J; Histone H2A type 2-C; Histone H2A type 2-A; Histone H2A type 1-A 12   0      50%     9.8 × 1010
5 CLC Charcot–Leyden crystal protein (galectin-10) 21 21      99% 8.991 × 1010
6 HIST1H2BH; HIST2H2BF Histone H2B type 1-H; Histone H2B type 2-F 28   0      83% 7.833 × 1010
7 PFN1 Profilin-1 26 21      79%   7.35 × 1010
8 PRG2 Bone marrow proteoglycan 2; Eosinophil granule major basic protein 15 15      59% 6.587 × 1010
9 RNASE3 Eosinophil cationic protein 22 22      80% 6.359 × 1010
10 CFL1 Cofilin-1 39 26      99% 4.895 × 1010
11 S100A9 Protein S100-A9 19 19      91% 4.482 × 1010
12 PRG3 Bone marrow proteoglycan 3 20 20      76% 4.331 × 1010
13 ANXA1 Annexin A1 72 72 93.90%   4.26 × 1010
14 GAPDH Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 54   6 98.50% 4.246 × 1010
15 HIST1H3A; HIST3H3; H3F3C Histone H3.1; Histone H3.1t; Histone H3.3C 22   2 81.60% 3.704 × 1010