25ft of LMR is pretty far, adds a ton of loss to what is already a lower power AP (11ac 2x2 indoor connectorized AP). In addition, to minimize loss, you need to use a smaller LMR jumper for strain relief, which adds more connector pairs and adds more loss. Herman is 100% correct, either extend the AP closer to the antennas, or if the antennas are outdoors, you would want to use an outdoor AP.
Some examples:
LMR-195 12" Jumper = ~1dB
LMR-200 @ 25ft = ~7.5dB loss
LMR-400 @ 25ft = ~3.5dB
At 25ft, you are likely better to use the jumper on each end + LMR400, but again, that will be a 6dB loss *at best*. Additionally, using the connectorized AP-304 means a 0.8dB additional loss in 2.4Ghz and 1.6dB in 5Ghz.
Also remember you need 3 of these 25ft cables plus the jumpers. 3 jumpers at $15 each and three LMR400 cables for about $50 each means you're going to spend $200 plust the antennas, all the additional labor, the added risk of bad cable install or errors, etc, just to extend the antennas for a $695 AP.
When you compare that, a 6dB loss is SIGNIFICANT and will result in ~25% of the coverage area (1/2 the distance in X+Y=1/4 total coverage area) of the same AP from an AP-305 installed in the same area. Using the AP-365 would be significantly better in terms of performance, cost to install, etc, etc.
But if you're going to do it anyway, just be aware of the above performance impacts. If you wonder why you can't get long distance coverage, or performance is poor, that is why.