“…isolated from patients treated at the Hospital das Clínicas of Ribeirão Preto Medical School, University of São Paulo—FMRP/USP (Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil)—from 1975 to 2019; two samples isolated from patients from Foz do Iguaçu, Paraná state ( Table S1 ); and four environmental samples (one soil and three armadillos isolates) collected in Ibiá, Minas Gerais state, were used in this study ( Table S2 ) [ 15 , 16 ]. The reference isolates were Pb18 (collected from the Laboratory of Medical Mycology Research of the Ribeirão Preto Medical School), representative of the species P. brasiliensis sensu stricto (S1b) [ 5 ]; Pbdog-EPM 194, representative of the species P. americana (PS2) [ 17 ]; T2-EPM 54, representative of the species P. restrepiensis (PS3) [ 18 ]; and Pb01, representative of the species P. lutzii [ 4 ] ( Table S3 ). These isolates were maintained by successive subcultures on Sabouraud dextrose agar (Oxoid ® LTD—Thermo Fisher Scientific ® , Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK), plus 0.15 g/L of chloramphenicol sodium succinate (Blau Farmacêutica, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil), and incubated at 25 °C.…”