Looks like you already accepted an answer, but I'm gonna give you a little more feedback to hopefully help you on your way. You've got a couple problems:
First, your example key 11110000 is confusing. Is that binary or hex? Binary 0b11110000 is an 8-bit number, not a 32-bit number. Whereas hexadecimal 0x11110000 is a 32-bit number but it probably isn't going to bitwise-shift as you might expect. For example, 0x11110000 shifted left 1 bit becomes 0x22220000, not 0x11100001.
Second, I see what you're trying to do by saving the MSb and trying to bitwise-OR it in later as the LSb. But your shift amounts are wrong. You want to bitwise-OR the value into bit 0, not bit 1. So your shift amount would be << 0, not << 1. Since << 0 is essentially a no-op you can just leave it off.
Here are some minor changes to your code that should make things right. I've added comments to hopefully describe what I changed.
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++)
{
//uint32_t a = (1 << 31) & key;
// This shifts key 31 bits to the right, with the result being
// bit31 becomes bit0. Since you are using an unsigned int,
// all the upper bits will be 0.
uint32_t bit0 = key >> 31;
key = (key << 1);
// This step is unnecessary and also incorrect. I believe you
// are trying to zero out bit0. The bitwise shift left (above) will have
// shifted in a zero already.
//key &= ~(1 << 1);
// Now bitwise-OR in bit0.
//key |= (a << 1);
key |= bit0;
}