Winners of the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, from left to right: Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young, October 2, 2017.

U.S.-born scientists Jeffrey Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael Young won the 2017 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for their discoveries of molecular mechanisms controlling our biological clocks, the award-giving body said on Monday.

The mechanisms help explain issues such as why people travelling long distances over several time zones often suffer jet lag and they have wider implications for health such as increased risk for certain diseases.

"(The three scientists') discoveries explain how plants, animals and humans adapt their biological rhythm so that it is synchronized with the Earth's revolutions," the Nobel Assembly at Sweden's Karolinska Institute said in a statement.

Thomas Perlmann, secretary at the Karolinska Institute Nobel Committee, described the reaction of Rosbash when first informed of the award: "He was silent and then he said 'you are kidding me'."

Rosbash was born in Kansas City to immigrants who had fled Nazi Germany in 1938, escaping the Holocaust by two years. Roshbash’s father was a cantor, or "hazzan" in Hebrew, the musical leader of a Jewish congregation.

The Nobel is not Rosbash's first award. Among others, the scientist has won the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, an annual recognition awarded by Columbia University to biologists and biochemists, and Yale University’s Gruber Prize in Neuroscience, which includes a cash prize of $500,000.

Medicine is the first of the Nobel Prizes awarded each year. The prizes for achievements in science, literature and peace were created in accordance with the will of dynamite inventor and businessman Alfred Nobel and have been awarded since 1901.

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Nobel medicine laureates have included scientific greats such as Alexander Fleming, the discoverer of penicillin, and Karl Landsteiner, whose identification of separate blood types opened the way to carrying out safe transfusions.

The prize has not been without controversy, especially with the benefit of hindsight, such as with 1948 award for the discovery of DDT, a chemical that helped battle epidemics but was later banned due to its harmful environmental impact.