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Western Blot (Weak / No Signal) severe

HRP Activity Inhibition by Sodium Azide

Symptom
Western blot shows no signal or extremely weak signal when using HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies. Chemiluminescent substrate fails to produce expected light emission even with adequate antibody binding and exposure time.
Common Causes
  1. 1 Sodium azide present in antibody storage buffer at preservative concentrations (typically 0.01-0.1%)
  2. 2 Sodium azide carryover from blocking buffer or wash buffers inhibiting HRP enzyme
  3. 3 HRP enzyme poisoned by azide preventing peroxidase catalytic activity
  4. 4 Residual sodium azide from inadequate washing steps
Solutions
  1. 1 Use carrier-free antibody formulations that are BSA, sodium azide, and glycerol-free
  2. 2 Remove sodium azide from antibody solutions by dialysis or buffer exchange before use
  3. 3 Prepare antibody dilution buffers without sodium azide (use 0.05% ProClin 300 as alternative preservative if needed)
  4. 4 Perform additional wash steps (5-6 × 5 min with TBST) to remove azide contamination
  5. 5 Switch to alkaline phosphatase-conjugated antibodies if HRP system remains problematic
Related Video (3)
Cell Signaling Technology ★ 88
Western Blot Troubleshooting Guide
"Directly addresses Western blot troubleshooting including no/weak signal problems, most likely to cover HRP inhibition and reagent buffer issues."
Bilibili (China-Accessible Mirrors) ★ 76
Western blot full protocol: Protein extraction to chemiluminescence
"Comprehensive protocol covering chemiluminescence detection step where HRP activity and signal generation are critical; demonstrates proper reagent handling."
Bilibili (China-Accessible Mirrors) ★ 72
Reliable and Reproducible Western Blot Results
"Focuses on achieving reliable and reproducible results through proper technique, including correct antibody and reagent preparation that prevents contamination issues."
Source: abcam.com ↗
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