Police arrested an 18-year-old man Saturday morning in the port area of Dover in connection with an attack a day earlier on a train at a London Underground station, London's Metropolitan Police said.
It was a "significant arrest" as the investigation continues, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu, the senior national coordinator for counterterrorism policing, said in a statement.
"This arrest will lead to more activity from our officers. For strong investigative reasons, we will not give any more details on the man we arrested at this stage," he said.
ISIS has claimed involvement in the train blast but has offered no evidence to support the claim.
Dover, about 80 miles southeast of London, is a port town with regular ferry services to France.
The suspect, who was arrested under the Terrorism Act, was being held in a local police station, the Met Police said. He will be transferred to a south London police station "in due course," the statement said.
The station in Parsons Green, southwest London, where an improvised device exploded as a train stopped during the Friday morning rush hour, reopened early Saturday -- with a visible police presence as doors first opened.
Meanwhile, hundreds of police officers scoured CCTV footage, questioned dozens of witnesses and studied the remnants of the device in search of clues to the identity of those responsible.
What we know
- UK terror threat level has been raised from "severe" to "critical," meaning an attack is expected imminently.
- Three of at least 30 people injured remained in a London hospital Saturday.
- ISIS said via its Amaq news agency that a "detachment" from the group had carried out the attack, but it gave no proof.
- Detectives have spoken with at least 45 witnesses and received scores of images from the public.
- More police were on patrol this weekend, in particular around "crowded places, iconic sites, transport hubs and ports," a police statement said.
Prime Minister Theresa May announced late Friday that the UK terror threat level had been raised to its highest level.
"The public will see more armed police on the transport network and on our streets, providing extra protection. This is a proportionate and sensible step which will provide extra reassurance and protection while the investigation progresses," May said.
"The threat of terrorism that we face is severe but together, by working together, we will defeat them," she said.
The government's emergency COBRA committee, chaired by UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd, will meet Saturday afternoon, a government spokesman said. It will be the second COBRA meeting since Friday's attack, bringing together the country's police and intelligence chiefs.
Police: 'Excellent progress'
Investigators were making "excellent progress" toward identifying, locating and arresting those behind what police have labeled a terrorist attack, Mark Rowley, assistant commissioner of the Met Police, said late Friday.
Asked about possible ISIS involvement, Rowley told reporters it is "routine" for the extremist group to take responsibility for attacks in "these sorts of circumstances," regardless of its actual involvement.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan welcomed news of the arrest, saying "significant activity" could be expected Saturday and over the days ahead. He also urged anyone with information related to the investigation to contact police.
"It is important we all remain alert and vigilant. There will be an increased police presence across London today and over this weekend, including additional armed officers. They are there to keep us safe," he said.
"London will never be intimidated by terrorism. We will always defeat those who seek to harm us and destroy our way of life."
The British Transport Police tweeted: "Nationwide, extra officers from BTP are on duty today. If you see something suspicious, don't delay."
'Everyone started running'
Scenes of panic broke out Friday at Parsons Green as the explosion went off in a busy train carriage.
"Suddenly, there was this boom," eyewitness Gustavo Vieira told CNN. "Everyone shouting and screaming. ... We were just leaving the carriage (when the blast happened) ... everyone starting running, ... and I didn't look back."
Most of those injured had flash burns, according to Rowley. None are thought to be in a serious or life-threatening condition, the London Ambulance Service said.
A photograph taken by a witness showed what looked like a large plastic bucket in a supermarket carrier bag with wires trailing from it and flames licking the top.
A British security source who was briefed on the investigation told CNN that a timer was found on the device. It's clear the device was intended to cause much greater damage, the source said, but cautioned that the investigation is still in its preliminary stages.
Another source briefed by investigators told CNN that an initial assessment of the device indicates it is "highly likely" to have contained the explosive TATP but that this has not been confirmed. It also appeared to have been crude and poorly designed, the source said.
Trump: 'We have to be tougher'
US President Donald Trump told reporters in the White House Rose Garden on Friday that "we have to be tougher, and we have to be smarter" in dealing with the terrorist threat.
Later, speaking to members of the United States Air Force at Joint Base Andrews near Washington, Trump said "radical Islamic terrorism" would be eradicated.
His comments followed controversy over tweets he posted earlier in the day in which he railed against "loser terrorists" and suggested that the perpetrator was known to UK authorities and recruited on the Internet.
Those tweets prompted May and a London police spokesperson to publicly rebuke the President.