It is very simple: On Stack Overflow for 99% of the time users are asking questions about practical coding problems.
That is why the Question Checklist has this question:
If your question doesn't include code, are you sure it shouldn't?
and at best it should repeat that question a couple of times.
It is unclear where or how you invoke the WCF Client and what your interface looks like.
You don't show how you tried to apply the BinaryFormatter
and what was failing in that attempt, nor did you explain how you tried to leverage proto-buf. Proto-buf does have an extension that allows it to be integrated into the WCF pipeline but it is unclear if you have tried that.
So those attempts would have shown us where you have missed bits and pieces.
That the code you have is over 200 lines is not an excuse to leave the code out. I have never had my software fail at 200 lines at once. It somehow is always isolated to a single call/line and isolating that call and reproducing the conditions to make it fail (in an unit test for example) is a (major) part of your task as a developer. That is why I linked to MCVE but the awesome Eric Lippert also wrote a great blog post about the same topic.
In conclusion: You have asked a question that left the users that can answer it with a lot of questions. The missing information shouldn't be provided on the go (Don't hesitate to ask for details) but be in the post from the start. That does require you spend (a lot of) time preparing your question, gathering all the research you did and your test results, so you can make sure that I or others can ideally copy/paste your code and drop it in an IDE to run/compile it.
If you want your question answered make sure there are no obstacles for the users to answer.
Your question was closed as too broad and down votes signaled correctly the quality issues with it. Now it is time for you to resolve those issues.