The metamorphosed Sadegh-Abad granite from the north Shahrekord Metamorphic Complex (NSMC) of Sanandaj-Sirjan Zone in west Iran shows evidence of ductile deformation. The augen to banded mylonitic granite (orthogneiss) involves sharp contacts with other rock units, including high-grade metamorphic rocks, such as eclogite, amphibolite, and garnet amphibolite as well as schists. U–Pb zircon dating reveals that the crystallization of the granitic magma occurred at 568 ± 14 Ma (Late Neoproterozoic, Ediacaran). The Sadegh-Abad mylonitic granite comprises high SiO2 (67–78 wt.%) and Na2O (3.23–7.79 wt.%) contents and low CaO (0.73– 1.61wt.%) and variable K2O concentrations (0.08–4.6 wt.%). The chondrite- normalized REE diagram shows enrichment in LREE relative to HREE (Ce/Yb)N = 1.90 to 6.12), a negative Eu anomaly (Eu/Eu* = 0.10–0.66), and nearly flat HREE patterns (Tb/Yb)N = 0.94–1.44). These are interpreted to have originated from a continental crustal source. This is further supported by the high concentra- tion of the alkali elements, U, Th, Rb, and the high 87Sr/86Sr(i) isotopic ratios (0.7086 to 0.7163). The lower HREEs abundances, negative Eu anomalies, and the low contents of mafic minerals may infer that partial melting of continental crust has taken place in low-pressure conditions within the plagioclase stability field, possibly of pre-existing calc-alkaline bodies in the lower continental crust. The charge of heating probably occurred via the injection of mafic magmas into the tonalitic and granodioritic continental crust.