You can do the entire thing like this:
% sh -c `sed 's@^.\(.*\)@md5sum \1@' <./dirlist.txt`
Really, I'm thinking you can make this a lot more efficient, but I don't know what is generating your list. If you can pipe it from that, or run that command through a heredoc to keep its output sane, you can do this whole job streamed, probably.
EDIT:
OK, you say it's from an "ls dump." Well, here's something a little flexible:
% ls_dump() {
> sed 's@^.\(.*\)$@md5sum \1@' <<_EOF_ | sh -s
>> `ls ${@}`
>> _EOF_
> }
% ls_dump -all -args -you /would/normally/give/ls
<desired output>
I think this calls only a single subshell in total. It should be pretty good, but in my opinion, find ... -exec md5sum {} ... + is probably safer, faster, and all you need.
EDIT2:
OK, so now I will actually answer the question. To remove the first character of a string in any POSIX compatible shell you need only look to parameter expansion like:
${string#?}
-Mike