Iran has over the weekend reported new technical advances in uranium enrichment as it pursues its nuclear programme with talks blocked to revive the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Tehran had started "feeding... a cascade of... centrifuges" at the Fordow fuel enrichment plant, which has recently been upgraded.
The techniques facilitate the process and would make it easier for Iran to switch to a different level of enriching uranium.
Iran confirmed Sunday it was feeding gas into the centrifuges, which it said it informed the IAEA of "at least two weeks ago", said Behrouz Kamalvandi, deputy head of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran (AEOI).
He said the media was "magnifying" the latest move for "specific goals", without elaborating, according to Iran state broadcaster IRIB.
In his latest report, the UN watchdog's director general Rafael Mariano Grossi said the changes at the plant under mountains south of the Iranian capital had been verified.
In January 2021, Iran said it was working to enrich uranium to 20 percent at Fordow, a level well beyond the 3.67 percent agreed under the 2015 deal.
Several months later -- with 90 percent enrichment required to make an atomic bomb -- another Iranian nuclear site reached 60 percent enrichment.
Tehran has always denied seeking to produce nuclear weapons.
The United States walked out of the Iran nuclear deal in 2018 under then president Donald Trump, who proceeded to reimpose biting sanctions on Tehran, prompting the latter to step away from many of the nuclear commitments it made under the accord.
Iran has held direct talks with remaining parties to the deal -- and indirect talks with the United States -- in a bid to restore the deal, but the negotiations have been at an impasse since March.
The nuclear deal will be on the agenda for US President Joe Biden's visit to Israel on Tuesday and Saudi Arabia on Friday.
"My administration will continue to increase diplomatic and economic pressure until Iran is ready to return to compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal, as I remain prepared to do," Biden wrote in Saturday's Washington Post.
Israel's Prime Minister Yair Lapid said Sunday the visit "will focus first and foremost on the issue of Iran", urging a "decisive" response to Tehran's nuclear ambitions.