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Western Blot (Unusual Gel Band Appearance) moderate

Black Dots or Speckled Background on Western Blot

Symptom
Non-specific dark dots or speckled pattern appear across the membrane background, not localized to protein bands. The signal appears as discrete spots rather than uniform background.
Common Causes
  1. 1 Blocking reagent (BSA or milk powder) has clumped or aggregated during preparation
  2. 2 Antibodies bind non-specifically to protein aggregates in blocking solution
  3. 3 Gel running buffer contaminated with bacterial spores from air exposure
  4. 4 Transfer buffer or wash buffers contaminated with bacteria during storage
  5. 5 Reagent vials contaminated with airborne fibres or particulates
Solutions
  1. 1 Filter blocking solution through 0.45 µm or 0.22 µm filter before use to remove aggregates
  2. 2 Prepare fresh blocking reagent and avoid over-stirring which can cause foaming and aggregation
  3. 3 Use sterile, fresh PBS or TBS buffer for all washing and blocking steps
  4. 4 Store all buffers at 4°C and discard after 1 week to prevent bacterial growth
  5. 5 Aliquot reagents into single-use portions to minimize contamination risk
Related Video (3)
Bilibili (China-Accessible Mirrors) ★ 85
Western blot hands-on: Protein extraction through detection
"Explicitly covers Western blot protocol with emphasis on troubleshooting common pitfalls, directly addressing blocking reagent preparation issues"
Bilibili (China-Accessible Mirrors) ★ 82
Western blot full protocol: Protein extraction to chemiluminescence
"Complete hands-on Western blot workflow including sample preparation through detection, showing proper blocking reagent application and membrane handling"
Bio-Rad Laboratories ★ 72
Western Blotting
"Foundational Western blot demonstration from Bio-Rad covering the core technique where blocking reagent preparation is a critical step"
Source: abcam.com ↗
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