Introduction

Adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) is a signaling molecule that regulates many biological activities in various organisms. It is synthesized from ATP by adenylyl cyclase (AC) and hydrolyzed to AMP by cAMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) to inactivate its activity as a signaling molecule. Intracellular cAMP levels are strictly regulated by the balance of AC and PDE activities1. ACs are classified according to their features into six classes (I–VI), which are evolutionarily unrelated to each other despite their common catalytic activity2,3. While class I, II, IV, V, and VI ACs are only present in a limited group of bacteria, most ACs belong to class III, which are widely distributed in prokaryotes and eukaryotes4. Guanylyl cyclases (GCs), which catalyze guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) synthesis, are homologous to class III ACs and emerged from a common ancestor5,6.

PDEs are classified into three classes according to the homology in the primary structure of their catalytic sites1,4,7. Class I PDEs are found in vertebrates and diverse eukaryotes. All mammalian PDEs belong to this class, which is subdivided into 11 families1. Class II PDEs are mainly found in yeasts and slime molds and class III comprises PDEs from bacteria1,4.

The physiological roles of cAMPs have been studied extensively in various organisms4,8,9,10. In prokaryotes, the cAMP receptor protein (CRP)–cAMP complex is involved in catabolite repression in Escherichia coli11. The CRP-like cAMP-activated global transcriptional regulator, GlxR, is a global regulator that controls the expression of various genes in Corynebacterium glutamicum12. cAMP signaling is required for virulence, and is used by Bordetella pertussis that causes whooping cough13, Bacillus anthracis that causes anthrax14, Mycobacterium tuberculosis that causes tuberculosis15, and the opportunistic human pathogen, Pseudomonas aeruginosa16. In addition, in eukaryotes, cAMP is involved in various cellular functions including glycogen degradation17, sense of taste signaling18, and flagellar movement of sperm19 in mammals, fruiting body formation in Dictyostelium discoideum20,21, and cell division in yeast22. Furthermore, cAMP plays important roles in photosynthetic organisms, such as light signaling and cell motility in cyanobacteria23,24, zygote formation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii25, and the photophobic response in Euglena gracilis26. Thus, the diverse functions of cAMP have been clarified in many organisms.

In land plants, no homologous sequences coding for ACs or PDEs have been identified from other organisms in the genomes of angiosperms such as Arabidopsis thaliana27, Oryza sativa28, and Solanum lycopersicum29, although novel ACs, which are not classified into the existing AC classes, have been reported30,31,32. However, progress in genome and transcriptome analyses of basal land plant lineages such as bryophytes and lycophytes33,34,35 led to the identification of a protein with class III AC and class I PDE sequences, named COMBINED AC with PDE (CAPE) due to the presence of these catalytic domains in a single protein36.

CAPE is composed of a PDE domain at the N-terminus and an AC domain at the C-terminus. Biochemical analyses using Marchantia polymorpha (Mp) CAPE confirmed that both domains have each enzyme activity36. MpCAPE is specifically expressed in the spermatogenous cells of antheridia (male sexual organ), but not in vegetative organs such as gemmalings and gametophytic plant bodies (thalli). Furthermore, CAPEs were only found in streptophytes that use motile sperm as the male gamete, such as bryophytes and ferns, but not in the genome of angiosperms36. However, the distribution of CAPE in the gymnosperms has not yet been clarified, although CAPE has not been found in the genomes of two species of Pinaceae, Pinus taeda and Picea abies36,37,38. Gymnosperms are diverse in terms of the delivery system of sperm to the egg cell. For example, Gnetales and Coniferae use non-motile sperm cells directly delivered by pollen tubes, whereas Cycadales and Ginkgo use motile sperm cells with flagella to swim to the egg cell. Thus, it is important to know whether cycads and ginkgo have CAPE.

Although the complete genomes of cycads and ginkgo have not yet been elucidated, a large amount of genetic information, especially transcriptome data, is available in public databases for many streptophytes including cycads and ginkgo. In our previous study, we were unable to identify the distribution of CAPE in taxa gymnosperms and the bryophyte, hornwort. Furthermore, the complete genomes from one gnetophyte, Gnetum montanum, and two zygnematophytes, Spirogloea muscicola and Mesotaenium endlicherianum, have recently been elucidated39,40. Thus, the present study investigated the distribution of CAPE in such streptophyte taxa in more detail.

Results

Database search of CAPE orthologs

We aimed to detect CAPE orthologs in some species of streptophyte lineage deposited in public databases using homology searches with the CAPE amino acid sequence from M. polymorpha (MpCAPE) as a query using the BLAST program.

C. revoluta (cycad) and G. biloba (ginkgo)

We first focused on the distribution of CAPE in cycad and ginkgo because we previously reported that the distribution of CAPE coincided with that of the taxonomic groups that use motile sperms as male gamete in streptophytes36. A BLAST search was performed against RNA-seq data deposited in the sequence read archive (SRA) of GenBank. A large number of short sequences (reads), which were predicted to encode CAPE, were detected from the cycad and ginkgo RNA-seq data in the SRA.

A. agrestis (hornwort)

The CAPE sequences in the liverwort, M. polymorpha, and the moss, Physcomitrella patens, were previously reported36. We were interested in the existence of CAPE in hornwort, the remaining taxonomic group in bryophytes for which the presence of CAPE has not been investigated. A BLAST search was performed against the genome DNA sequence data of A. agrestis in the SRA of GenBank41,42. Many short sequences were found that were predicted to encode CAPE.

Zygnematophyceae and Mesostigma viridae

We reported that CAPE was not found from Zygnematophyceae and M. viridae following a search of the public RNA-seq databases36. Recently, complete genomes have been elucidated from two species in Zygnematophyceae, Spirogloea muscicola and Mesotaenium endlicherianum40, and Mesostigma viridae43. However, CAPE was not detected in these genomes.

Gymnosperms other than cycad and ginkgo

We reported that CAPE was not detected in the genomes of two species of Pinaceae, Pinus taeda and Picea abies36. The complete genome of a gnetophyte, Gnetum montanum, was recently elucidated39. However, we were unable to detect CAPE in the genome of G. montanum. On the other hand, we searched for CAPE orthologs in other taxonomic groups of gymnosperms due to the high diversity of gymnosperms. First, a homology search was performed for OneKP, which is large-scale gene sequencing data mainly based on transcriptomes of > 1000 species of plants44. CAPEs were detected from streptophyte algae and bryophytes, in which the distribution of CAPE was reported in our previous study36. Unexpectedly, scaffold sequences, of which the deduced amino acid sequences exhibit significant homology to a part of MpCAPE, were detected from gymnosperms that do not produce motile sperms, including four species each from Cupressaceae and Taxaceae (Table S3). In particular, a scaffold sequence of Cephalotaxus harringtonia (GJTI_scaffold_2061849) contained the sequence encoding both AC and PDE partial sequences. On the other hand, scaffolds exhibiting the homology to CAPE were not detected in any species of Pinaceae, which was consistent with a previous report that stated that CAPE was not detected in the genomes of P. taeda and P. abies36. In addition to searching the OneKP database, a BLAST search was performed against the RNA-seq data of a Cupressaceae, Cryptomeria japonica, deposited in the SRA of GenBank. Many short sequences were detected that were predicted to encode CAPE.

Isolation of CAPE genes from C. revoluta, G. biloba, C. japonica, and A. agrestis

We found partial sequences of CAPE-like genes from each RNA-seq data in the SRA. RT-PCR was performed to obtain the full-length coding sequence of CAPE using mRNA from C. revoluta (Cr), G. biloba (Gb), A. agrestis (Aa), and C. japonica (Cj), followed by 3′, 5′- RACE PCR for C. revoluta and G. biloba. The cDNAs containing the full-length CAPE coding sequences were obtained from C. revoluta, G. biloba, and A. agrestis. The deduced amino acid sequences of CrCAPE, GbCAPE, and AaCAPE were determined and comprised 1252 (CrCAPE), 1259 (GbCAPE), and 1240 (AaCAPE) amino acids, respectively, and contained one PDE domain at the N-terminus, multiple transmembrane regions located at the middle part of the protein, and one AC domain near the C-terminus (Fig. 1 and Fig. S1). Four transmembrane regions were predicted in CrCAPE, GbCAPE, and AaCAPE. The presence of multiple transmembrane regions in the middle part of CAPE appears to be a common feature of CAPE (Fig. S2). Two cDNA clones were obtained for C. japonica: CjCAPE clone#1 and CjCAPE clone#2. CjCAPE clone#1 encoded a partial PDE domain that lacked 14 amino acids at the N-terminus and had a frameshift, causing different reading frames of PDE and AC (Fig. S3). CjCAPE clone#2 encoded PDE domain and an incomplete AC domain, caused by an insertion of 42 bp at the middle of the AC-coding sequence (Fig. S3).

Figure 1
figure 1

Schematic representation of the domain organization of CAPE. The catalytic domains of PDE and AC are shown as gray and boxes filled with dots, respectively. Membrane-spanning regions are shown as thin black boxes. Aa, Anthoceros agrestis; Cr, Cycas revoluta; Gb, Ginkgo biloba; Mp, Marchantia polymorpha.

Comparison of the AC domain of CAPE to the class III ACs

The amino acid sequences of the AC domains of Cr, Gb, Cj, and AaCAPE were compared with the class III ACs, MpCAPE-AC, Arthrospira platensis CyaC (ApCyaC), Bos taurus type 1 AC (BtACt1C1 and BtACt1C2), and Homo sapiens type 10 AC (HsACt10C1 and HsACt10C2). The eight consensus amino acids required for catalysis and substrate binding were completely conserved in the AC domains of CrCAPE, GbCAPE, and AaCAPE (Fig. 2). The match rates of each AC domains to the amino acid sequence of MpCAPE-AC domain were 83% identity and 96% similarity for CrCAPE, 82% identity and 96% similarity for GbCAPE, 82% identity and 96% similarity for CjCAPE (clone#1), and 87% identity and 98% similarity for AaCAPE.

Figure 2
figure 2

Amino acid alignment of the AC domain of CAPE. Multiple alignment of the AC domain of CAPE with Arthrospira platensis CyaC (ApCyaC), Bos taurus type 1 AC (BtACt1C1 and BtACt1C2), and Homo sapiens type 10 AC (HsACt10C1 and HsACt10C2). Amino acids involved in binding the substrate ATP are indicated by asterisks. Amino acid residues that were identical in the majority of the sequences are shown in black. Aa, Anthoceros agrestis; Cj, Cryptomeria japonica; Cr, Cycas revoluta; Gb, Ginkgo biloba; Mp, Marchantia polymorpha.

Comparison between CAPE PDE domain and class I PDEs

The amino acid sequences of the PDE domains of Cr, Gb, Cj, and Aa CAPE were compared with class I PDEs, MpCAPE-PDE, Homo sapiens PDE4B, PDE8A, and PDE9A. In PDEs, two divalent metal cations are coordinated by highly conserved amino acids in the catalytic domain and are essential for catalysis. The PDE domains of isolated CAPEs completely retained the eight amino acid residues necessary for the metal binding (Fig. 3). In class I PDEs, purine bases (A or G) of the substrates (ATP or GTP) are recognized by the highly conserved glutamine (Fig. 3), whereas the corresponding amino acid residues in the PDE domains of CrCAPE and CjCAPE are replaced by asparagine, and those of GbCAPE, AaCAPE, and MpCAPE are replaced by threonine (Fig. 3). The match rates of each domain to the amino acid sequence of MpCAPE-PDE domain were 49% identity and 77% similarity for CrCAPE, 54% identity and 78% similarity in GbCAPE, 46% identity and 74% similarity for CjCAPE (clone#2), 48% identity and 80% similarity for AaCAPE.

Figure 3
figure 3

Amino acid alignment of the PDE domain of CAPE. Multiple alignment of the PDE domain of CAPE with Homo sapiens PDE4B, PDE8A, and PDE9A. Amino acids involved in metal ion binding are indicated by asterisks. Arrowhead shows amino acid residues involved in the recognition of purine bases. Amino acid residues found to be identical in the majority of the sequences are shown in black. Aa, Anthoceros agrestis; Cj, Cryptomeria japonica; Cr, Cycas revoluta; Gb, Ginkgo biloba; Mp, Marchantia polymorpha.

Phylogenetic analyses of the class III AC and class I PDE catalytic domains

Phylogenetic analysis was performed using the amino acid sequences of the catalytic domains of the CAPE-ACs and the class III ACs and GCs (Fig. 4). The CAPE-ACs formed a monophyletic group in which the tree topology among CAPE-ACs was consistent with the phylogeny in streptophytes. The CAPE-ACs were found to be closely related to those of Streptophyte algae, Green algae, Alveolata and Stramenopiles ACs (Fig. 4). Apart from the group (Streptophyte algae/Green algae 1) closely related to CAPE, another group of green plant AC-related sequences (Streptophyte algae/Green algae 2) was formed. Another AC-like sequence (Mp7g08500.1) that differed to CAPE was present in the M. polymorpha genome36 and formed a group with Streptophyte algae/Green algae 2.

Figure 4
figure 4

Phylogenetic tree of catalytic domains of class III ACs and GCs. The phylogenetic tree was inferred using the maximum likelihood method with the LG + G model. All positions with < 70% site coverage were eliminated. Numbers represent support values (> 50%) obtained with 100 bootstrap replicates using the MEGA7 software (LG + G mode). Numerical numbers before branch nodes are ML, NJ, and MP. The evolutionary distances were calculated in units of the number of amino acid substitutions per site as indicated by the scale bar below the tree. The accession numbers of the AC and GC sequences used for the phylogenetic analysis are shown in Table S1.

Phylogenetic analysis was performed with the amino acid sequences of the catalytic domains of the CAPE-PDEs and class I PDEs (Fig. 5). The CAPE-PDEs formed a monophyletic group in which the tree topology among CAPE-PDEs was almost consistent with the phylogeny in streptophytes. The catalytic domain of CAPE-PDEs was found to be closely related to the animal PDE9 family (Fig. 5).

Figure 5
figure 5

Phylogenetic tree of catalytic domains of class I PDE. The phylogenetic tree was inferred using the maximum-likelihood method with the LG + G + I model. All positions containing gaps and missing data were eliminated. Numbers represent support values (> 50%) obtained with 100 bootstrap replicates using the MEGA7 software (LG + G + I mode). Numerical numbers before the branch nodes are ML, NJ, and MP. The evolutionary distances were computed in units of the number of amino acid substitutions per site as indicated by the scale bar below the tree. The accession numbers of PDE sequences used for the phylogenetic analysis are shown in Table S2.

Discussion

The present study elucidated more precise information about the distribution of CAPE in streptophytes by isolating its orthologs from gymnosperms, C. revoluta, G. biloba, C. japonica, and the hornwort, A. agrestis. The distribution of CAPE genes is summarized in Table 1, which includes information about the taxonomic groups that produce motile sperm in streptophytes. All streptophytes that reproduce with motile sperm, including C. revoluta and G. biloba, retained the CAPE genes. In streptophytes, CAPE is thought to have emerged during the evolutionary process between Klebsormidiophyceae and Charophyceae36. Charophyceae were the first streptophytes to develop motile sperm, and the architecture of the sperm is very similar to that of the basal land plants45. Thus, the appearance of CAPE in Chara braunii coincides with the emergence of motile sperm as the male gamete in streptophytes. On the other hand, CAPE was lost multiple times, each independently, during the formation of streptophytes taxa including Zygonematophyceae, parts of gymnosperms (Gnetaceae and Pinaceae), and angiosperms. Therefore, CAPE may play an important role in motile sperm function. The role of cAMP in the regulation of flagellar motility has been investigated in mammals and algae46,47, and it has been suggested that cAMP may also be involved in motile sperm regulation in plants. The role of cAMP in plant cells may be restricted to the function of motile sperm, and it is hypothesized that loss of the motile sperm system coincides with loss of CAPE. On the other hand, CAPE is present in gymnosperms that do not produce motile sperms such as C. japonica.

Table 1 Distribution of CAPE in streptophytes.

In the present study, two cDNA clones were obtained from C. japonica: CjCAPE clone#1 and CjCAPE clone#2 (Fig. S3). The presence of the cDNA clones containing both PDE and AC coding sequences indicated that C. japonica contains the CAPE gene within its genome. In mammals, PDE families contain many splice variants that are related to the regulation of cellular signaling pathways48,49,50, and multiple transcripts from CAPE gene are registered in the M. polymorpha genome database as a result of alternative splicing. It is likely that mRNA encoding both PDE and AC domains in one protein is expressed in the specific stages of the life cycle or tissues of C. japonica. Furthermore, in OneKP database, putative CAPE sequences in Cupressales were detected in four species of Cupressaceae (Callitris gracilis, Pilgerodendron uviferum, Taxodium distichum, and Widdrigntonia cedarbergensis) and four species of Taxaceae (Amentotaxus argotaenia, Cephalotaxus harringtoina, Pseudotaxus chienii, and Torreya uncifera) (Table S3). This wide distribution in Cupressales is likely to indicate that CAPE is conserved in Cupressales rather than being maintained in only a few species of Cupressales. Investigating CAPE in Cupressales may help to elucidate the function of cAMP other than that related to motile sperm.

The AC domains of CrCAPE, GbCAPE, CjCAPE, and AaCAPE had fully eight conserved consensus amino acids required for catalysis and substrate binding, and high match rates to MpCAPE (Fig. 2). MpCAPE has been shown to have adenylyl cyclase activity36; therefore, it is predicted that they will have cAMP synthesis activity. The PDE domains of CrCAPE, GbCAPE, CjCAPE, and AaCAPE also retained all eight amino acids required for metal binding and showed high match rates to MpCAPE (Fig. 3). The glutamine residue, which is one of the most conserved amino acids among the class I PDEs and is involved in the recognition of purine base of the substrate, was replaced by asparagine in CrCAPE and CjCAPE-PDEs, and by threonine in GbCAPE, AaCAPE, and MpCAPE-PDEs (Fig. 3). CrCAPE and CjCAPE are predicted to have PDE activity since glutamine and asparagine have similar amino acid properties. Furthermore, MpCAPE-PDE has been shown to have PDE activity36; thus GbCAPE-PDE and AaCAPE-PDE are also expected to have PDE activity. In summary, the AC and PDE domains of CAPE should have cAMP synthesis/hydrolysis activity, respectively, and it is expected that cAMP functions as a signaling molecule in plants expressing CAPE.

Most CAPEs have an even number of transmembrane sites between the PDE and AC domains (Fig. S2). CAPEs should be localized to the membrane and the PDE and AC domains are likely to face the same side of the membrane. The cellular level of cAMP can be strictly controlled via cAMP synthesis and hydrolysis by the AC and PDE domains of CAPE, respectively. Different cAMP effectors regulate each specific signaling process in the cytoplasm; thus, cAMP must be prevented from free diffusion and localized in small restricted areas to activate specific effectors51,52. CAPEs may facilitate the spatial regulation of cAMP by having both domains in the cytoplasmic region.

Phylogenetic analysis of AC revealed that CAPE-AC was closely related to streptophyte and green algal AC (Fig. 4; streptophyte algae/green algae 1). A chimeric protein may be produced by the fusion of streptophyte algae/green algae 1 AC and PDE, as an ancestor of CAPE. After PDE fusion, streptophyte algae/green algae 1 type AC and CAPE-AC appeared to be phylogenetically separated from their common AC ancestor. On the other hand, there were no green algal PDEs that showed a close relationship with CAPE-PDE, although animal PDE9, and fungal and amoebozoal PDEs had a close relationship with CAPE-PDE (Fig. 5). Therefore, CAPE-PDE may have a common ancestor with these PDEs. However, the positions of the animal PDEs (PDE1-PDE11) are scattered in the phylogenetic tree, and the animal PDEs do not form a monophyletic group, suggesting that PDEs may have fast molecular evolutionary rates to optimize their function. Therefore, it is possible that CAPE-PDE may have convergently evolved from an ancestral PDE of streptophyte algae and may have become similar to PDE9.

Phylogenetic analysis of PDE revealed that CAPE-PDE was closely related to the animal PDE9 family (Fig. 5). PDE9 is a cGMP-specific enzyme and has the lowest Km of any PDE for cGMP in all PDE families49,53. Although MpCAPE-PDE is cAMP-specific36, it could have a low Km for cAMP. MpCAPE-AC activity is relatively low compared with that of other class III ACs36, making it a high affinity type to effectively degrade cAMP.

Phylogenetic analyses of the class III AC and class I PDE sequences revealed that genes encode proteins with the same domain organizations as CAPE, that is, proteins containing both class III AC and class I PDE domains in non-photosynthetic stramenopiles, Saprolegnia diclina, Saprolegnia parasitica, Achlya hypogyna, and Thraustotheca clavata. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that both domains in non-photosynthetic stramenopile CAPE-like sequences were separated from those in plant CAPEs, indicating that they are produced independently. These CAPE-like proteins may play a role in cAMP signaling in non-photosynthetic stramenopiles.

We found that CAPE was conserved in plants that reproduce with sperm (Table 1). Among land plants, cycads, ginkgo, ferns, lycophytes, and bryophytes, which produce sperm, all retained CAPE. Even in streptophyte algae, CAPE is present in Coleochaetaceae and Characeae, which produce motile sperm, but not in Klebsormidiaceae and Zygnematophyceae, which do not produce sperm. The distribution of CAPE in streptophytes (Table 1) and the specific expression of MpCAPE in spermatogenous cells of antheridia36 strongly suggest that CAPE plays a role in motile sperm function. Analysis of CAPE mutants constructed by gene targeting in model plants, such as M. polymorpha and P. patens, could verify this and clarify the physiological role of cAMP in plants.

Methods

Database search

We used the amino acid sequence of M. polymorpha CAPE to perform a BLAST search using the public NCBI website and the tblastn program against RNA-seq data for Cycas revoluta (SRX661923), Ginkgo biloba (SRX1135298, SRX1135299, SRX1135300, and SRX1084991), or Cryptomeria japonica (DRX001291-001294, DRX081263-081272, DRX155737, DRX155749, and DRX155777). For Anthoceros agrestis, its whole genome shotgun sequence data ERX714368 and ERX71436942 were assembled with pipeline at DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ) and the assembled contig data by tblastn program was searched using M. polymorpha CAPE sequence as a query. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers were designed using the retrieved sequences. A BLAST search was performed at the public OneKP website using the tblastn program using the amino acid sequence of M. polymorpha CAPE to obtain the partial sequences of CAPE in gymnosperms.

Preparation of total RNA from C. revoluta, G. biloba, C. japonica, and A. agrestis

RNA samples were prepared from ovules harvested at the time when sperm cells were developing in pollinated pollen grains from C. revoluta or G. biloba, male strobili of C. japonica, and gametophytes bearing antheridia of A. agrestis (Oxford isolate) using the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) method54. Frozen specimens were broken up using a mortar and pestle with quartz sand in liquid nitrogen and then incubated in CTAB solution (2% CTAB, 1.4 M NaCl, 0.2% 2-mercaptoethanol, 20 mM EDTA, and 100 mM Tris–HCl, pH 8.0) at 60 ˚C for 30 min. RNA was prepared from A. agrestis and C. japonica using CTAB solution supplemented with 1% polyvinylpyrrolidone-40. RNA extraction was performed three times using chloroform and precipitated with 2-propanol. The precipitates were washed with 70% ethanol and dissolved in RNase-free water. RNA was precipitated again with 2 M LiCl overnight on ice. The samples were centrifuged at 11,000 g for 30 min and the RNA was washed with 70% ethanol and dissolved in RNase-free water.

Isolation of CAPE cDNAs from C. revoluta and G. biloba by reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR and 5' and 3'-RACE

C. revoluta and G. biloba CAPE cDNA samples were generated by RT-PCR using total RNA samples with the following primers: CrCAPE-f, 5'-ATTTGCCAAAGATGGTGGAG-3' and CrCAPE-r, 5'-TCCTATGGGAAGCCATGAAG-3' for C. revoluta and GbCAPE-f, 5'-GCATTTCCCCTCGATAGACA-3' and GbCAPE-r, 5'-TGAATGCAGACAATCAGGGA-3' for G. biloba. Amplified PCR products were cloned into pCR-Blunt II-TOPO vectors (Thermo Fisher, MA, USA) and the nucleotide sequences were determined. Since the 5' and 3' ends for C. revoluta and the 5' end for G. biloba were not contained in the PCR products, 5'- and 3'-RACE was performed to obtain the terminal fragments using 5'- and 3'-RACE kits (Thermo Fisher). Finally, full-length cDNA fragments were amplified by RT-PCR using primers designed using the sequences encoding the initiation and termination codons, cloned into a low-copy plasmid, pSTV29 (Takara Bio, Shiga, Japan), and sequenced to verify the full-length sequences.

Isolation of CAPE cDNAs from A. agrestis and C. japonica by RT-PCR

A. agrestis CAPE cDNA was amplified by RT-PCR using total RNA samples with the following primers: AaCAPE-f, 5'-CACCATGGCCAATTTTGATGAGGATG-3' and AaCAPE-r, 5'-TCATTTTTCTGTTAATTCACGATAC-3'. The amplified PCR products were cloned into pENTR/D-TOPO (Thermo Fisher) and sequenced. C. japonica CAPE cDNAs were generated RT-PCR using total RNA samples with the following primers: CjCAPE-f1, 5'-GGCATGCCTGTGATGTCTTA-3' for clone#1 or CjCAPE-f2, 5'-ATAGTAGATTCACCTCCATTTAG-3' for clone#2 and CjCAPE-r, 5'-TCATTTCTCTGTTAGTTCCCTGTATCC-3'. Amplified PCR products were cloned into pCR-Blunt II-TOPO vectors (Thermo Fisher) and the nucleotide sequences were determined.

Phylogenic analysis of CAPE

The amino acid sequences of the AC and PDE domains (Tables S1 and S2) were aligned using ClustalX2.055. The maximum likelihood (ML) model of AC and PDE selected by the model test of MEGA 7.056. ML, the neighbor joining (NJ) method, and most-parsimonious (MP) were performed using bootstrap values.