| Possible Cause | Remedy | 
|---|
| Improper blocking reagent | 
The blocking agent may have an affinity for the protein of interest and thus obscure the protein from detection. Try a different blocking agent and/or reduce both the amount or exposure time of the blocking agent.Explore blocking reagents | 
| Insufficient antibody reaction time | 
Increase the incubation time. | 
| Insufficient signal amplification | 
Switch from a monoclonal to a polyclonal primary antibody. In polyclonal antibodies, the presence of multiple epitopes on the same protein can generate greater signal.If using a conjugated primary antibody, switch to an unconjugated primary antibody and secondary antibody, which will increase the sensitivity of detection.Biotin-conjugated antibodies provide greater sensitivity and higher amplified signal when compared to fluorochrome- or enzyme-conjugated secondary antibodies.Search for antibodies using our Antibody Finder | 
| Antibody concentration is too low or antibody is inactive | 
Multiple freeze-thaw cycles, bacterial contamination, or repeated use of antibody solution can change antibody titer or activity. Increase antibody concentration or prepare it fresh.For fluorescent secondary antibodies, ensure that the antibody stock vial and any aliquots are protected from light. | 
| Antibody not suitable for Western blotting or not compatible with preparation of cells/tissue |  | 
| Outdated detection reagents |  | 
| Protein transfer problems | 
Optimize protein transfer (see above). | 
| Dried blot in chromogenic detection | 
If there is poor contrast using a chromogenic detection system, the blot may have dried. Try rewetting the blot in water to maximize the contrast. | 
| Tap water inactivates chromogenic detection reagents |  | 
| Azide inhibits  HRP | 
Do not use azide in the blotting solutions. | 
| Antigen concentration is too low | 
Load more antigen on the gel prior to the blotting. |