Home Failure Case Library Non-Specific Signal from Insoluble Protein in Well or Dye Front
Western Blot (Unexpected Multiple Bands) moderate

Non-Specific Signal from Insoluble Protein in Well or Dye Front

Symptom
Strong signal appears at the top of the gel (in or near the loading well) or at the bottom (dye front), unrelated to the expected molecular weight of the target protein. This is especially common for very high molecular weight proteins (>250 kDa).
Common Causes
  1. 1 Insoluble proteins above gel separation range (>250 kDa) trapped in loading wells
  2. 2 Protein aggregates formed during sample preparation cannot enter gel matrix
  3. 3 Dye front transferred to membrane carries non-specifically bound proteins
  4. 4 Stacking gel layer transferred along with resolving gel retains trapped material
Solutions
  1. 1 Remove stacking gel layer before transferring to eliminate trapped material
  2. 2 Excise dye front from gel prior to transfer to prevent non-specific signal
  3. 3 Check protein databases for expected molecular weight including all isoforms
  4. 4 For high MW proteins (>150 kDa), use lower percentage gels (6-8%) and longer run times
  5. 5 Increase sample solubilization by adding 2% SDS and 8 M urea to lysis buffer for difficult proteins
Related Video (3)
Cell Signaling Technology ★ 85
Western Blot Troubleshooting Guide
"Dedicated Western blot troubleshooting guide that directly addresses diagnosis and solutions for common problems including unexpected band patterns"
Bilibili (China-Accessible Mirrors) ★ 75
Western blot full protocol: Protein extraction to chemiluminescence
"Complete hands-on workflow from protein extraction through detection demonstrates proper sample preparation and gel electrophoresis technique to prevent insoluble protein accumulation"
Bilibili (China-Accessible Mirrors) ★ 72
Western blot hands-on: Protein extraction through detection
"Emphasizes troubleshooting common pitfalls with detailed protocol coverage of protein extraction and electrophoresis steps critical to avoiding insoluble protein artifacts"
Source: abcam.com ↗
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