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Close up view of a young woman holding her head in her hands with her eyes closed.

Migraine symptoms that appear long before a headache can include fatigue, light sensitivity, neck pain and difficulty concentrating. Credit: skynesher/Getty

First drug for early migraine symptoms

Ubrogepant — a drug known to treat migraine headaches — seems to alleviate debilitating non-headache symptoms, such as fatigue and light sensitivity, that can start hours or even days before a full-blown migraine attack. In a phase III trial, participants self-reported that ubrogepant increased their ability to concentrate, and reduced their fatigue and light sensitivity in the lead up to a migraine, but the “effect sizes were small” compared with placebo, notes neuroscientist Gregory Dussor.

Nature | 5 min read

Reference: Nature Medicine paper

Obsidian was the Mexica’s best friend

The Mexica Empire — also known as Aztecs — forged far-reaching trade networks in their pursuit of volcanic obsidian glass. Researchers measured the trace elements in almost 800 artefacts containing obsidian found in Templo Mayor — the main worship temple in the Mexica Empire’s capital — to pinpoint their geological origin. The pieces came from at least eight locations, some of which spanned beyond the empire’s borders.

Science Alert | 5 min read

Reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper

All living things glow until they die

A new study hints that plants and animals — including people — emit a tiny glow when alive, which disappears after death. This ‘ultraweak photon emission’ — equivalent to a few photons a second per square centimetre of skin tissue — might be a byproduct of energy-producing processes within cells.

Science Alert | 4 min read

Reference: The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters paper

An infographic showing the contrast in UPE emissions in four mice, when alive (top) and dead (bottom).

Researchers used detectors sensitive enough to capture single photons to image those emitted by mice when alive and dead. (Salari, V. et al. J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2025, 16, 17, 4354-4362)

Features & opinion

US is hobbling a health-care breakthrough

Drug makers are scrambling to navigate an “existential threat” to one of the most promising medical breakthroughs of the century: mRNA vaccines. In the United States, the cradle of much mRNA research, public trust has been damaged by anti-vaccine activism, led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr, who is now at the head of the country’s top health agency. In this newly hostile political climate, mRNA-vaccine advocates hope to remind US president Donald Trump of the technology’s immense success against COVID-19 during his first term. “I think what we’ll see in the next few years is that this tech is ceded to international competitors,” says RNA-therapeutics researcher Alex Wesselhoeft

Nature | 12 min read

In a survey released this month by the Alliance for mRNA Medicines, nearly half of 106 senior biotech and pharma executives reported direct impacts from US policy shifts this year — including project downsizing, budget cuts, delayed investments, terminated partnerships, job losses, hiring freezes and planned relocation of operations overseas.

OpenAI’s chief scientist looks ahead

Jakub Pachocki leads the development of advanced artificial intelligence (AI) systems at OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT. From his perspective, progress towards artificial general intelligence (AGI) — human-level cognitive ability — is happening faster than expected. “Going into grad school, a milestone for AGI that I saw was mastering the game of Go and I thought it would take decades. Of course, it fell in 2016, which to me was a world-shattering moment,” he says. He thinks, ultimately, AI models will generate original science. “Even this year, I expect that AI will, maybe not solve major science problems, but produce valuable software, almost autonomously.”

Nature | 6 min read

The secrets of super-healthy seniors

In his new book Super Agers, physician-scientist Eric Topol reports on his takeaways from the ‘Wellderly’ study, which looked at more than 1,400 unusually healthy people over 80 years old. Here are five strategies he suggests will help us age well:

• Take plenty of exercise, especially strength training

• Get adequate and consistent sleep

• Do activities that bolster mental health, such as spending time in nature and maintaining social relationships

• Don’t confuse tracking your health data with making the necessary changes to actually become healthier

• Be wary of health ‘influencers’ who flog unproven interventions. “If they’re hawking a supplement,” he says, “I would kick them off the list of being credible.”

The New York Times | 5 min read

Where I work

Cesaria Huo conducts fieldwork at the Botanic Garden in Maputo, Mozambique, which hosts a large bat population.

Cesária Huó is a conservation biologist at the Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique.Credit: Kang-Chun Cheng for Nature

Conservation biologist Cesária Huó photographed a colony of fruit-eating bats (Eidolon helvum) as part of her work recording bat vocalizations in Mozambique. “As we learn about the different types of vocalization, we can understand the phases of a bat’s life better and perhaps be able to conserve species with fewer interventions,” she says. (Nature | 3 min read)