I had some issues with spring bean that had to implement interface and extend some base class in the past.
This was rather an advanced problem related to AOP and Spring, so I cannot be 100% sure that this is what your interviewer asked, but it is totally something you can stumble upon in the wild, and not limited only to Spring.
Often you want to add AOP to your Spring application (for example to use @Transactional annotations). The problem is that there are couple of ways how AOP can be implemented, from patching bytecode at compile time or loadtime, to generation something similar to wrappers at runtime.
The latter approach is the most cheap, build-structure-wise, and used more commonly than others but it has it's disadvantages.
One of them is that there are plenty of ways to do this and approach differ from what exact bean (class instance) you want to weave (wrap). Thing like "whether class implements interface", "whether class extends class" and combinations matter here.
I won't delve deep into details here, simply because I struggled with this pretty while ago, but you can get a grasp of what you'll have to deal with from spring docs briefly discussing this matter.
I will say though that in my project things went wrong when I decided to add class that extended another class and implement some interface. It was quite a challenge to make things work, because you have to have really decent understanding of how Spring itself and AOP weaving techniques work and how to configure all these things so they work as expected.
UPDATE: Answering your question in one sentence: You probably do not want to extend abstract class and implement interface at the same time in the code that deals with dynamic class proxying/AOP/code generation.