The demands further escalated the ongoing diplomatic clash over a bomb attack that killed 85 people 12 years ago at a Jewish cultural centre in Buenos Aires.
After more than a decade of futile investigation and court processes, Argentina finally last week issued international arrest warrants for former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.
Warrants were also issued against Iran's former secret service minister Ali Fallahian, former foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati and five other former high-ranking Iranian officials.
On Monday, the Argentine Foreign Ministry called Iranian chargé d'affaires in Buenos Aires, Mohsen Baharvand, to clarify media reports that Iranian officials intended to issue a similar arrest warrant against the Argentinian prosecutor, Alberto Nisman, in retaliation for last week's move.
'There has not yet been a reply' from Teheran, a ministry official told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
Baharvand is the Islamic Republic's highest diplomatic authority in Argentina since the two countries withdrew ambassadors from each other after the 1994 bombing.
Special prosecutor Nisman charged that the attack on the Jewish centre was ordered by the Iranian leadership. The warrants for the arrest and extradition of the officials were delivered to Iran as well as to the international police organization Interpol.
In late October, Nisman identified the alleged suicide attacker who drove a van loaded with explosives to the Amia building on July 18, 1994 as Ibrahim Hussein Berro, a Lebanese member of radical Iranian-backed Islamic group Hezbollah.
The Argentine Foreign Ministry added that it submitted to the chargé d'affaires a written answer to an earlier note from Iranian authorities.
The authorities in Buenos Aires have rejected in strong terms Iran's claims that Argentine Justice is corrupt and that its decisions are politically-driven.
Iran on Saturday rejected as 'legally baseless and unlawful' the arrest warrants issued by Argentina. Tehran claimed that the aim of the request is to put more pressure on Iran over its nuclear programme.
Iran has staunchly denied earlier accusations in connection with the bombing.
Two years ago, 22 Argentine suspects were cleared of involvement in the case, for lack of evidence.
During the case, a former Iranian spy chief implicated the Tehran government in the bombing plot. Abdolghassem Mesbahi, who lives under a witness protection programme in Germany, testified that Iran had recruited no Argentine nationals for the plot.