Thats not exactly what fusogenic means. A protein gets into a cell through a number of ways. Fusogenic means it basically fuses with the outer cell wall and unfolds the contents into the cell. This is in contrast with Endocytosis where part of the cell wall encapsulates, breaks off, and brings it into the cell.
Of course if something is fusogenic, it does mean that it could potentially cause another cell bumping into it to fuse together causing it to bind into one clump.
Thats not exactly what fusogenic means. A protein gets into a cell through a number of ways. Fusogenic means it basically fuses with the outer cell wall and unfolds the contents into the cell. This is in contrast with Endocytosis where part of the cell wall encapsulates, breaks off, and brings it into the cell.
Of course if something is fusogenic, it does mean that it could potentially cause another cell bumping into it to fuse together causing it to bind into one clump.
Look at Figure 1: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Fusogenic-Liposomes-as-Nanocarriers-for-the-of-Kube-Hersch/6c2aa9ac52ca5a7af4efe94ca37caa8882be7c1f