What?
The throttle body (fuel injection setup) is the air inlet to the engine. In both situations, the air into the engine is compressed before going into the intake manifold. Whether a supercharger or turbo, the air comes through the throttle body, gets compressed, and then is forced into the intake. That is the basics of compressing the air before it gets into the cylinder.
In the old carburator setup, the air/fuel is compressed by the supercharger. Using a turbo, the air is compressed before going into the carb. Is this the situation you are talking about? Couple of specs - the carb is a mechanical air/fuel mixer, you don't want to compress air/gas with a turbo as the heat generated in the rotors would ignite the mix, cooler air mixture provides greater fuel burn which provides greater energy output.
Many put an intercooler between the output of the turbo to the intake manifold to gain the cooler compressed air. There are many variations of the supercharger and they can also use an intercooler. Many consider a turb a supercharger as its end purpose is to compress air. For a supercharger, the variances provides also are different driven, but many are belt driven off the front of the crank. Turbos are driven by the exhaust volume flow.