By Santosh Menon

U.S. crude was $4.17 at $145.82 a barrel by 6:56 a.m. EDT, off highs of $145.98, after jumping $5.60 or 4 percent a barrel in late trading on Thursday.

London Brent crude was up $4.25 at $146.28 a barrel.

Leading the oil complex was ICE gas oil futures which climbed to a new record high of $1,335 a tonne amid strong demand for diesel and aviation fuel.

Oil, which had been on the retreat for much of early part of the week, reversed course on Thursday as fears of supply disruptions from potential hot-spots, OPEC members Iran and Nigeria, resurfaced.

A spate of missile tests by Iran, the world's fourth-largest oil exporter, in the last two days against a backdrop of rising tensions with Israel and the United States has left the oil markets worried.

Iran has threatened to strike back at Tel Aviv as well as U.S. interests in and a key oil shipping route if it is attacked over its nuclear program, which Israel and the West fears is aimed at making nuclear weapons.

The United States reminded Tehran it was ready to defend its allies.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, the main militant group in Nigeria's oil-producing region, said it was abandoning a ceasefire to protest against a British offer to help tackle lawlessness in the region.

Rebel attacks on oil infrastructure in Nigeria, the world's eighth biggest exporter, have also been partly responsible for the nearly 50 percent rise in prices this year.

Workers at Brazil's Petrobras threatened to launch a five-day strike next week that would affect all 42 Campos basin offshore platforms, which account for more than 80 percent of daily oil output of around 1.8 million barrels.

Oil has also risen due to persistent weakness in the U.S. dollar. Investors have flocked to oil and other commodities this year as a hedge against rising inflation and the weak dollar.

Oil has continued rising despite efforts by top exporter Saudi Arabia to raise production to its highest rate in three decades in an effort to tame oil prices.

Qatar Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah told Reuters on Friday that he saw no demand for the additional crude that Saudi Arabia has pledged to pump.

(Additional reporting by Felicia Loo in Singapore; Editing by William Hardy)